diff --git a/content/.DS_Store b/content/.DS_Store index dabe712..4b9d980 100644 Binary files a/content/.DS_Store and b/content/.DS_Store differ diff --git a/content/article/jakobi.md b/content/article/jakobi.md index 9eac722..ecba49b 100644 --- a/content/article/jakobi.md +++ b/content/article/jakobi.md @@ -690,7 +690,7 @@ Like Dilling but unlike Tagle, Karko exhibits two donative verbs, *tìì* (wit {{< gloss "(100)" >}} {r} **Karko** -{g} *íǐ(g)*,[1in.acc]({sc})|*t̪ēē*,cow|*tèn*,give>1| +{g} *íǐ(g)*,[1pl.incl.acc]({sc})|*t̪ēē*,cow|*tèn*,give>1| {r} “give us a cow!” {{< /gloss >}} @@ -984,15 +984,20 @@ Unlike Old Nubian and Nobiin converbs, which are marked by *‑a,* Mattokki and {{< /gloss >}} {{< gloss "(133)" >}} -{g} *ai*,[1sg]({sc})|*ek=k*,[2sg=acc]({sc})({sc})|*aa-wee-tir-rin*,[prog]({sc})-say-[appl>2/3-neut.1sg]({sc})| +{g} *ai*,[1sg]({sc})|*ek=k*,[2sg=acc]({sc})|*aa-wee-tir-rin*,[prog]({sc})-say-[appl>2/3-neut.1sg]({sc})| {r} “I am telling you” {{< /gloss >}} -Massenbach, Armbruster, Werner, and Abdel-Hafiz represent the biverbal applicative constructions as single words.[^157] At least in Andaandi, however, the question clitic te can be inserted between the converb and the finite donative verb. This indicates that the converb and the donative verb are separable free forms. The question of whether the two verbs in the corresponding Nobiin and Mattokki applicative constructions can be separated as well has yet to be investigated. +Massenbach, Armbruster, Werner, and Abdel-Hafiz represent the biverbal applicative constructions as single words.[^157] At least in Andaandi, however, the question clitic te can be inserted between the converb and the finite donative verb. This indicates that the converb and the donative verb are separable free forms. The question of whether the two verbs in the corresponding Nobiin and Mattokki applicative constructions can be separated as well has yet to be investigated.[^161] [^157]: Massenbach, “Wörterbuch des nubischen Kunûzi-Dialektes”; Armbruster, *Dongolese Nubian: A Grammar,* §3998; Werner, *Grammatik des Nobiin,* p. 272; Abdel-Hafiz, *A Reference Grammar of Kunuz Nubian.* +[^161]: Example provided by El-Guzuuli, p.c., November 2013. -(134) +{{< gloss "(134)" >}} +{r} **Andaandi** +{g} *kus=te*,open=[q]({sc})|*tir-kon*,appl>2/3-[pt-3]({sc})| +{r} “did he open [it] for him/her?” +{{< /gloss >}} In Midob, the applicative construction is associated with a reflex of *\*tir* realized as *tir.* As in Kordofan Nubian (see [3.4](#34)) it is a bound morpheme tied to the lexical verb stem by the linker *‑(i)n.* After a consonant-final lexical verb such as *əək,* the linker is realized by the allomorph *‑Vn.* Apparently, due to lag assimilation, *V* adopts the quality of the stem vowel *ə.* @@ -1000,9 +1005,16 @@ Although *\*tir* originally only referred to 3rd or 2nd person recipients/benefi [^162]: Examples provided by Ishaag Hassan, p.c., January 2019. -(135) +{{< gloss "(135)" >}} +{r} **Midob** +{g} *əj*,[1sg]({sc})|*náj=je*,[2sg=acc]({sc})|*an*,that|*jawaab=e*,letter=[acc]({sc})|*əək-ən-tir-hem*,send-[lk-appl-prf.1sg]({sc})| +{r} “I have sent that letter to you” +{{< /gloss >}} -(136) +{{< gloss "(136)" >}} +{g} *on*,[3sg]({sc})|*əj=je*,[1sg=acc]({sc})|*an*,that|*jawaab=e*,letter=[acc]({sc})|*əək-ən-tir-hum*,send-[lk-appl-prf.3sg]({sc})| +{r} “s/he has sent that letter to me” +{{< /gloss >}} ## The Applicative in the Kordofan Nubian Languages {#34} @@ -1019,27 +1031,51 @@ Dilling *ti* is referred to by Kauczor as “verbum dativum.”[^163] When attac [^163]: Kauczor, *Die bergnubische Sprache,* §§374–377. [^164]: Examples from ibid., §380f. -(137) +{{< gloss "(137)" >}} +{r} **Dilling** +{g} *fe-n-di-re*,say-[lk-appl-prs.1sg]({sc})| +{r} “I tell him” +{{< /gloss >}} -(138) +{{< gloss "(138)" >}} +{g} *or=gi*,head=[acc]({sc})|*o=bod-n-di-m* [oboːnum],[1sg.acc]({sc})=hit-[lk-appl-pst.3]({sc})| +{r} “he hit me (on my) head” +{{< /gloss >}} In Tagle, too, the linker *‑(i)n* connects the applicative extension *-tì* with the lexical verb stem. The *‑tì*-extension is realized as [dì] after adopting the [+voice] feature of the nasal in *‑(i).* Although Tagle suffixes mostly take the same ATR value as the root vowel, the applicative suffix retains the [+ATR] value of the donative verb *tì.* This suggests that the applicative extension *‑n-dì* has not yet acquired the phonological properties of "regular" bound morphemes, whose vowels commonly harmonize with the root vowel. As applicative extension, Tagle *tì* has a low tone. When used as independent verb, it has a high tone, as seen in (97) and (98). Examples (139) and (140) show the applicative extension referring to a 3rd person and a 1st person beneficiary.[^166] [^166]: Tagle examples provided by Ali Ibrahim, p.c. -(139) +{{< gloss "(139)" >}} +{r} **Tagle** +{g} *t̪ɛ́nd̪ʊ̀*,girl.[sg]({sc})|*ɪ́d̪ʊ́=gɪ́*,woman=[acc]({sc})|*kᴧ̀t̪ʊ̀=ʊ̀*,field=[acc]({sc})|*ʃʊ́-n-dì-m*,weed-[lk-appl-pst.3]({sc})| +{r} “the girl weeded the field for the woman” +{{< /gloss >}} -(140) +{{< gloss "(140)" >}} +{g} *t̪ɛ́nd̪ʊ̀*,girl.[sg]({sc})|*kᴧ̀t̪ʊ̀=g*,field=[acc]({sc})|*ɔ̀=ʃʊ́-n-dì-m*,[1sg.acc]({sc})=weed-[lk-appl-pst.3]({sc})| +{r} “the girl weeded the field for me” +{{< /gloss >}} Applicative extentions may attach to an intransitive or transitive verb stem, as illustrated by the Karko verbs *ɕīj* “descend ([itr]({sc}))" and kɛɛ “make sth. good ([tr]({sc}))," respectively, shown in (141)–(143). The applicative extension *‑n-dìì* is a realization of *-n-tìì.* It licenses both a 3rd person, a 1st person, and a 2nd person beneficiary. The pronominal 3rd person singular beneficiary *t̪éě* is not required to be overtly expressed. The position of the locative‑marked adjunct is variable, preceding or following the verb phrase.[^167] [^167]: Karko examples provided by Ahmed Hamdan, p.c. For the plural stem extension *‑(V)k* on *ɕīj‑īk-n-dìì* see [4.2](#42) and [6.5](#65). -(141) +{{< gloss "(141)" >}} +{r} **Karko** +{g} *t̪óóɲē*,child.[dim.pl]({sc})|(*t̪éě*),[3sg.acc]({sc})|*kóld*,well.[loc]({sc})|*ɕīj-īk-n-dìì*,descend-[plr-lk-appl]({sc})| +{r} “the children go down for him into the well” +{{< /gloss >}} -(142) +{{< gloss "(142)" >}} +{g} *t̪óóɲē*,child.[dim.pl]({sc})|*ɔ̀=ɕīj-īk-n-dìì*,[1sg.acc]({sc})=descend-[plr-lk-appl]({sc})|*kóld*,well.[loc]({sc})| +{r} “the children go down for me into the well” +{{< /gloss >}} -(143) +{{< gloss "(143)" >}} +{g} *ɕwàr*,existence|*ɔ̀=nàà*,[1sg=gen]({sc})|*ûúg*,[2pl.acc]({sc})|*t̪ɔ́ɔ́*,place|*kɛ̀ɛ̀-ŋgàl-dìì*,make.good-[tr.pst-appl]({sc})| +{r} “my existence made your life good.”/ lit. “… made the place good for you” (This is said to children to remind them that they are dependent of their parents and that they have to pay them respect.) +{{< /gloss >}} As shown in this section, applicative constructions in the Kordofan Nubian languages use a single “give” verb, which adds an object argument whose referent may be a 1st, 2nd or 3rd person beneficiary. This simplification of the original system is also attested in Midob ([3.3](#33)). @@ -1053,25 +1089,55 @@ Reflexes of *\*deen* “give to 1st person” are attested in all Nile Nubian ap **Table 9. Nile Nubian applicative marker *\*deen*** -When Old Nubian ⲇⲉⲛ “give to 1st person” is employed as a valence operator, the resulting applicative is a bipartite construction composed of V1 – a lexical verb stem marked by the converb marker ‑ⲁ – plus the finite ⲇⲉⲛ as V2. The plural number of a 1st person beneficiary is reflected by the pluractional extension ‑ⳝ (see [4.1](#41)). Example (141) also shows that the values of the inflectional suffixes on the main verb – with ‑ⲉ-ⲥⲟ marking the imperative form in a command – have scope over the preceding converb, which means that it is also conceived as an imperative form, even though it does not show the corresponding inflectional suffixes. +When Old Nubian ⲇⲉⲛ “give to 1st person” is employed as a valence operator, the resulting applicative is a bipartite construction composed of V1 – a lexical verb stem marked by the converb marker ‑ⲁ – plus the finite ⲇⲉⲛ as V2. The plural number of a 1st person beneficiary is reflected by the pluractional extension ‑ⳝ (see [4.1](#41)). Example (141) also shows that the values of the inflectional suffixes on the main verb – with ‑ⲉ-ⲥⲟ marking the imperative form in a command – have scope over the preceding converb, which means that it is also conceived as an imperative form, even though it does not show the corresponding inflectional suffixes.[^170] -(144) +[^170] Example from Van Gerven Oei, *A Reference Grammar of Old Nubian,* [CHECK]. Old Nubian ⲇⲉⲛ is here written with a final ⳡ rather than ⲛ, thus mirroring its realization as palatal [ɲ] when followed by the palatal stop [ɟ] (i.e., Old Nubian ⳝ). -The position of the pronominal beneficiary appears to be variable. In (141) the pronominal beneficiary ⲟⲩⲕⲁ immediately precedes the converb, whereas in Nobiin example (145) the theme precedes the converb, the pronominal beneficiary occupying clause-initial position. +{{< gloss "(144)" >}} +{r} **Old Nubian** +{r} ⲙⲩⲥⲧⲏⲣⲟⲩ ⲉⲕ̄ⲕⲁ ⲉ̄ⲅⲓⲇⲣⲟⲩⲕⲁ ⲟⲩⲕⲁ ⲡⲗ̄ⲗⲓ̈ⲅⲣⲁ̄ ⲇⲉⳡⳝⲉⲥⲟ +{g} *mustērou*,mystery|*eik=ka*,[2sg=acc]({sc})|*eigid-r-ou=ka*,ask-[prs-1/2pl=acc]({sc})|*ou=ka*,[1pl.excl=acc]({sc})|*pill-igr-a*,shine-[caus-cnv]({sc})|*deñ-j-e-so*,appl>1-[plact-imp.2/3sg.pred-comm]({sc})| +{r} “reveal to us the mystery which we ask you” (St 5.3–7) +{{< /gloss >}} -(145) +The position of the pronominal beneficiary appears to be variable. In (141) the pronominal beneficiary ⲟⲩⲕⲁ immediately precedes the converb, whereas in Nobiin example (145) the theme precedes the converb, the pronominal beneficiary occupying clause-initial position.[^172] -Most commonly, applicative constructions assign a beneficiary role to the applied object, as seen in (144) and (145). However, when interacting with an utterance verb like “say, tell,” the applied object is assigned the role of addressee. +[^172]: Example from Abel, *Eine Erzählung im Dialekt von Ermenne,* ex. 69. -(146) +{{< gloss "(145)" >}} +{r} **Nobiin** +{g} ,*ay=ga*,[1sg=acc]({sc})|,*an-gi*,[1sg.gen]({sc})-uncle|,*gelabije*,jellabiya|,*uwo=ga*,two=[acc]({sc})|V1,*jan-a*,buy-[cnv]({sc})|V2,*deen-on*,[appl>1-pt.3sg]({sc})| +{r} “my uncle bought me two jellabiyas” +{{< /gloss >}} -Unlike Old Nubian and Nobiin, which employ the converb marker *‑a,* the converbs in Mattokki and Andaandi are unmarked. +Most commonly, applicative constructions assign a beneficiary role to the applied object, as seen in (144) and (145). However, when interacting with an utterance verb like “say, tell,” the applied object is assigned the role of addressee.[^173] -(147) +[^173]: Example from Werner, *Grammatik des Nobiin,* p. 188. Werner’s glossing of *‑a* as “a(-Form)” is here replaced by the glossing [cnv]({sc}). Note that we would expect the vowel of *-dèn* to be long rather than short. -Studies of the modern Nile Nubian languages mostly represent the periphrastic applicative constructions as a single word. This may be due to the realization of these biverbal forms as a single prosodic phrase. However, at least in Andaandi, the question clitic *te* can be inserted between the dependent verb and the finite donative verb, thus providing clear evidence of the bipartite character of the applicative constructions. +{{< gloss "(146)" >}} +{g} *ànn-ùu*,[1sg.gen]({sc})-grandfather|*ày=g*,[1sg=acc]({sc})|*íig-a-dèn-ô*,tell-[cnv-appl>1-pt.3sg]({sc})| +{r} “my grandfather told me” +{{< /gloss >}} -(148) +Unlike Old Nubian and Nobiin, which employ the converb marker *‑a,* the converbs in Mattokki and Andaandi are unmarked.[^175] + +[^175]: Example from Abdel-Hafiz, *A Reference Grammar of Kunuz Nubian,* p. 114. + +{{< gloss "(147)" >}} +{r} **Mattokki** +{g} *een*,woman|*kadee=g*,dress=[acc]({sc})|*sukki-deen-s-u*,wash-[appl>1-pt2-3]({sc})| +{r} “the woman washed the dress for me” +{{< /gloss >}} + +Studies of the modern Nile Nubian languages mostly represent the periphrastic applicative constructions as a single word. This may be due to the realization of these biverbal forms as a single prosodic phrase. However, at least in Andaandi, the question clitic *te* can be inserted between the dependent verb and the finite donative verb, thus providing clear evidence of the bipartite character of the applicative constructions.[^176] + +[^176]: Example provided by Example provided by El-Shafie El-Guzuuli, p.c.. The [3sg]({sc}) pronominal direct object is unexpressed. + +{{< gloss "(148)" >}} +{r} **Andaandi** +{g} *er*,[2sg]({sc})|*ay=gi*,[1sg=acc]({sc})|*iʃin=te*,send=[q]({sc})|*deen-ko-n*,[appl>1-pt-3sg]({sc})| +{r} “did you send it to me?” +{{< /gloss >}} As for Kordofan Nubian, only Dilling and Karko have retained reflexes of *\*deen.* They appear in two grammatical contextsL i) when employed as lexical transfer verbs, as shown in [3.1](#31); and ii) when used as applicative extensions in imperative forms. Tagle, by contrast, has preserved no reflex of *\*deen.* @@ -1088,19 +1154,36 @@ The directed transfer verbs *kuʃ* “take to” and *kwata* “bring” assign [^177]: Examples from Kauczor, *Die bergnubische Sprache,* §375 and §378. -(149) +{{< gloss "(149)" >}} +{r} **Dilling** +{g} *kuʃ-in-di*,take.to-[lk-appl>2/3.imp.2sg]({sc})| +{r} “take it to him!” +{{< /gloss >}} -(150) +{{< gloss "(150)" >}} +{g} *oti*,water|*o=kwata-n(i)n-(i)*,[1sg.acc]({sc})=bring-[appl>1-imp.2sg]({sc})| +{r} “bring me water!” +{{< /gloss >}} Similar to Dilling *-nin,* Karko exhibits with *-nVn* a realization of the linker *-(i)n* fused with *tèn* “give to 1st person,” which is a regular reflex of *\*deen.* The applicative extension *-nVn* contrasts with *-n-dìì* (after *b* realized as the allomorph *‑m-bìì*) which originates from the linker plus the irregular donative verb *tìì* and refers to a 3rd person beneficiary. Interestingly, in Kordofan Nubian applicative constructions the morphosyntactic behavior of the two objects differs from the behavior of the corresponding objects in the Nile Nubian languages. In the Kordofan Nubian languages, it is the number of the theme argument that triggers the selection of a singular or plural verb stem. In Karko, for instance, a singular theme selects the singular verb stem *ɕùù* (151), while a plural theme selects the plural stem *ɕùb* (152). In the Nile Nubian languages, by contrast, it is the number of the beneficiary which interacts with the verb stem, as seen in (144), where the 1st person plural beneficiary selects the *‑(i)j*-marked plural verb stem. -(151) +{{< gloss "(151)" >}} +{r} **Karko** +{g} *kèt̪=èg*,cloth.[sg=acc]|*ɕùù-m-bìì*,wash.[sng-lk-appl>2/3]({sc})| +{r} “wash the cloth for him/them!” +{{< /gloss >}} -(152) +{{< gloss "(152)" >}} +{g} *kèn=ég*,cloth.[pl=acc]({sc})|*ɕùb-n-dìì*,wash.[plr-lk-appl>2/3]({sc})| +{r} “wash the clothes for him!” +{{< /gloss >}} -(153) +{{< gloss "(153)" >}} +{g} *áǎ*,[1pl.excl.acc]({sc})|*kèn=ég*,cloth.[pl=acc]({sc})|*ɕùb-nùn*,wash.[plr-lk.appl>1]({sc})| +{r} “wash the clothes for us!” +{{< /gloss >}} Summarizing [3](#3), we recognize that the reflexes of the donative verbs *\*tir* and *\*deen* continue to be employed as lexical verbs of transfer. Parallel to this use and bleached of their original semantic content, they have come to serve as valency-increasing grammatical elements in applicative constructions – at least in the Nile Nubian languages. In Kordofan Nubian, however, a simplification process has begun which is associated with the emergence of a new verb *ti* which is replacing the original donative verbs and is considered to result from a morphological blending of both. The initial consonant of *ti* appears to be a reflex of the initial of *\*deen,* while the high front vowel of *ti* stems from the vowel of *\*tir.* In Karko, such *CV*-shaped lexical items are realized with a long vowel, as confirmed by Karko *tìì* “give,” in Tagle with a short vowel, *tí.* This contrast is also attested by Karko *dìì* “drink” corresponding to Tagle *dì,* and Karko *tìì* “die” corresponding to Tagle *tì.* Note that Karko *tìì* “die” and *tìì* “give” are homophones. @@ -1128,9 +1211,18 @@ Browne points out that Old Nubian ‑ⳝ “refers to a plural object (either di [^179]: Browne, *Old Nubian Grammar,* p. 49. -(154) +{{< gloss "(154)" >}} +{r} **Old Nubian** +{r} ⲕⲁⲡⲟⲡⲓⲅⲟⲩⲕⲁ ⲇⲟⲗⲓⳝⲛⲓⲁ̄ +{g} *kapop-igou=ka*,pearl-[pl=acc]({sc})|*dol-ij-ni-a*,gather-[plact-purp-quot]({sc})| +{r} “in order to gather pearls” (SC 4.19) +{{< /gloss >}} -(155) +{{< gloss "(155)" >}} +{r} ⲇⲓⳝⲟⲗⲅⲟⲩⲛⲁ +{g} *di-j-ol-gou=na*,die-[plact-pst1-pl=gen]({sc})| +{r} “of those who are dead” (SC 8.12–13) +{{< /gloss >}} While Lepsius refers to the -(i)j-extension in Nobiin as “verbum plurale,”[^181] Werner uses the term “Pluralobjekt-Erweiterung” (plural object extension).[^182] This latter designation is, however, not quite adequate, because *‑(i)j* is not confined to interacting with plural objects; it can also be triggered by an intransitive plural subject and by event plurality.[^183] @@ -1138,7 +1230,7 @@ While Lepsius refers to the -(i)j-extension in Nobiin as “verbum plurale,”[^ [^182]: Werner, *Grammatik des Nobiin,* p. 173. [^183]: Examples from Werner, p.c., October 2020. -| | | | | +| Nobiin | | | | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | (156) | ày kàb-ìr | “I eat” [oj sg]({sc}) | ày kàb-j-ir | “I eat (a lot or several times)” [oj pl]({sc}) | (157) | ày nèer-ìr | “I sleep” | ày nèer-j-ìr | “I sleep (several times)” | @@ -1149,21 +1241,37 @@ Because of the wide range of functions covered by *‑(i)j,* Khalil uses the ter As for *‑(i)j* in Mattokki, Massenbach highlights the fact that it expresses the intensity of an action.[^185] -[^185]: Massenbach, “Wörterbuch des nubischen Kunûzi-Dialektes,” p. 132. +[^185]: Examples from Massenbach, “Wörterbuch des nubischen Kunûzi-Dialektes,” p. 132. -(158) +{{< gloss "(158)" >}} +{r} **Mattokki** +{g} *man*,that|*ʃibir*,basket|*urub-buu-n*,have.hole-[stat-3sg]({sc})| +{r} “that basket has a hole” +{{< /gloss >}} -(159) +{{< gloss "(159)" >}} +{g} *man*,that|*ʃibir*,basket|*urub-ij-buu-n*,have.hole-[plact-stat-3sg]({sc})| +{r} “that basket is thoroughly perforated” +{{< /gloss >}} -(160) +{{< gloss "(160)" >}} +{g} ter,[3sg]({sc})|*gulud=ki*,jar=[acc]({sc})|*aa-toog-ij-mun-um*,[prog]({sc})-break-[plact-neg-neut.3sg]({sc})| +{r} “he does not smash the jar” +{{< /gloss >}} Abdel-Hafiz, in turn, chooses the term “distributive” to refer to the Mattokki *‑(i)j*-extension because it “has the effect of spreading the action over time and space.” He also points out that the *‑(i)j*-suffix “can indicate the intensity with which an action is performed,”[^186] as illustrated in (162). [^186]: Abdel-Hafiz, *A Reference Grammar of Kunuz Nubian,* p. 117f. -(161) +{{< gloss "(161)" >}} +{g} *duguu=g*,money=[acc]({sc})|*gull-ij-os-s-u*,throw-[plact-pfv-pt2-3sg]({sc})| +{r} “s/he threw the money here and there” +{{< /gloss >}} -(162) +{{< gloss "(162)" >}} +{g} *gur*,bull|*baab=ki*,door=[acc]({sc})|*toog-is-s-u*,break-[plact-pt2-3sg]({sc})| +{r} “the bull broke the door” +{{< /gloss >}} In (162) the *‑(i)j*-extension is realized as [is], due to regressive assimilation when followed by the preterite suffix *‑s.* @@ -1171,37 +1279,46 @@ As for the Andaandi suffix *‑(i)j,* Armbruster notes that it “usually has an [^187]: Armbruster, *Dongolese Nubian: A Grammar,* §2881. Examples from ibid, §2883f. -| | | | | | +| Andaandi | | | | | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | (163) | war | “jump” | war-ij | “jump continually” | | (164) | or | “tear” | or-ij | “tear to pieces” | | (165) | aaw | “do” | aw-ij | “do repetitively” | -(166) +{{< gloss "(166)" >}} +{g} *tinn-ɛssi=n*,her-sister=[gen]({sc})|*dilti=g*,hair=[acc]({sc})|*aw-ij-in*,do-[plact-3sg]({sc})| +{r} “s/he plaits her sister’s hair” +{{< /gloss >}} The Dilling reflex of *\*‑(i)j* is *‑j.* Kauczor’s examples suggest that it can refer to a plural object but it can also express the intensity or frequency of an event.[^189] [^189]: Kauczor, *Die bergnubische Sprache,* §262. -| | | | | | +| Dilling | | | | | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | (167) | mon | "dislike" | mon-j-i | “hate (intensely)” | | (168) | bel-er | "throw [oj sg]({sc}) to the ground (in wrestling)" | bel-j-i | “throw to the ground [oj pl]({sc}) or frequently” | The Tagle reflex of *\*‑(i)j* is realized as the voiced palatal stop [ɟ] or after /l/ as the voiceless palatal stop [c]. It expresses repetitive or multiple events. The examples are provided in the 2nd singular imperative form. -| | | | +| Tagle | | | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | (169) | áŋ-ɪ́r-ɪ̀ / áŋ-c-ɪ́ [áɲcɪ́] | “catch, seize!” [oj sg/rpt]({sc}) | | (170) | kɪ̀ŋ-ɪ́r-ɪ̀ / kɪ́ŋ-c-ɪ́ [kɪ́ɲcɪ́] | “repair!” [oj sg/rpt]({sc}) | -(171) +{{< gloss "(171)" >}} +{g} *kòn-ú-nù=gì*,bird-[sg-dim.sg=acc]({sc})|*kákár=kɔ̀*,stone=[ins]({sc})|*jɪ̀l-ɪ̀*,throw-[imp.2sg]({sc})| +{r} “throw a stone at the bird!” +{{< /gloss >}} -(172) +{{< gloss "(172)" >}} +{g} *kòn-ú-nù=gì*,bird-[sg-dim.sg=acc]({sc})|*kákár-í=kɔ̀*,stone-[pl=ins]({sc})|*jɪ́l-c-ɪ́*,throw-[plact-imp.2sg]({sc})| +{r} “continue to throw stones at the bird!” +{{< /gloss >}} In Karko, the *\*‑(i)j*-extension is realized as voiced palatal plosive [ɟ] after a vowel, and as *Vɟ* after a consonant (except for /n/ and /l/). Following these consonants, *\*‑(i)j* is realized as voiceless alveopalatal fricative [ɕ]. In this case, [ɕ] is difficult to identify as a suffix because the preceding /l/ and /n/ are deleted. The following (unmarked) imperative forms refer to a singular or plural object. -| | | | | | +| Karko | | | | | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | (173) | ɕàn | “buy/sell!” [oj sg]({sc}) | ɕàɕ | “buy/sell!” [oj pl]({sc}) | | (174) | kìl | “jump over!” [oj sg]({sc}) | kìɕ | “jump over!” [oj pl]({sc}) | @@ -1209,33 +1326,58 @@ In Karko, the *\*‑(i)j*-extension is realized as voiced palatal plosive [ɟ] a [^190]: The singular stem *tōl-ór* is extended by the plural stem marker *-Vr* (see [6.3](#63)). -(176) +{{< gloss "(176)" >}} +{g} *kwàt̪*,pebble.[sg]({sc})|*t̪ōl-ór*,swallow-[plr]({sc})| +{r} “swallow the pebble!” +{{< /gloss >}} -(177) +{{< gloss "(177)" >}} +{g} kwǎr,pebble.[pl.acc]({sc})|t̪òɕ,swallow.[plact]({sc})| +{r} “swallow the pebbles!” +{{< /gloss >}} In the Kordofan Nubian languages like Karko, the pluractional extension is selected by the plural object (patient) in a transitive clause like (177) and also by the plural direct object (theme) in a ditransitive clause, as shown in (179). This patterning of the transitive patient with the ditransitive theme – but not with the indirect object, the beneficiary – is known as the indirect-object construction.[^191] [^191]: Haspelmath, “Ditransitive Constructions.” -(178) +{{< gloss "(178)" >}} +{g} *kə̄k-ə̄nd̪=ə́g*,stone-[sg=acc]({sc})|*ɔ̀g=ɛ̄g-nɛ̀n*,[1sg.acc]({sc})=roll-[lk.appl>1]({sc})| +{r} “roll the stone for me!” +{{< /gloss >}} -(179) +{{< gloss "(179)" >}} +{g} *kə̄k-ə̄r=ə́g*,stone-[pl=acc]({sc})|*ɔ̀g=ɛ̄g-ɛ̄j-nɛ̂n*,[1sg.acc]({sc})=roll-[plact-lk.appl>1]({sc})| +{r} “roll the stones for me!” +{{< /gloss >}} Proto-Nubian *\*‑(i)j* is reflected by Midob *‑c* (allomorph *‑j*). According to Werner, this extension marks participant and event plurality, the latter expressing “repetitivity, intensity.”[^192] However, he provides only two pairs of contrastive examples. Examples (180) and (181) show that *‑c* is sensitive to the plural number of the intransitive subject. [^192]: Werner, *Tìdn-áal,* pp. 50, 52. -(180) +{{< gloss "(180)" >}} +{r} **Midob** +{g} *ìi-hêm*,come-[ind.prf.1sg]({sc})| +{r} “I came” +{{< /gloss >}} -(181) +{{< gloss "(181)" >}} +{g} *ìi-c-áhàm*,come-[plact-ind.prf.3pl]({sc})| +{r} “they came” +{{< /gloss >}} The other pair of examples raises the question whether the *‑j*-extension is required by an unexpressed pronominal plural object or even by event plurality.[^194] [^194]: Examples from ibid., pp. 49 and 86. Werner erroneously translates them as “I answered” and “we answered.” However, as the Midob *-wa*-suffix marks the 1st person singular and plural of the “continuous indicative,” they should be rendered by “I answer” and “we answer.” -(182) +{{< gloss "(182)" >}} +{g} *éeg-ìr-wà*,answer-[tr-ind.cont.1sg]({sc})| +{r} “I answer” +{{< /gloss >}} -(183) +{{< gloss "(183)" >}} +{g} *éeg-ìr-j-wà*,answer-[tr-plact-ind.cont.1pl]({sc})| +{r} “we answer” +{{< /gloss >}} In addition to its event plurality and participant plurality marking function, Midob *-c* has come to serve as the marker of the 2nd person imperative plural form. The corresponding singular form is morphologically unmarked.[^195] @@ -1262,7 +1404,7 @@ As Armbruster was the first to provide evidence of the *‑(i)k*-extension, this [^196]: Armbruster, *Dongolese Nubian: A Grammar,* §§2852-2855. -| | | | | | +| Andaandi | | | | | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | (186) | jaag | "knead" | jak-k-i | “compress” | | (187) | joog | "grind" | jok-k-i | "chew (food)" | @@ -1272,9 +1414,15 @@ Armbruster provides a list of some twenty Andaandi verbs exhibiting *‑k.* Most [^197]: El-Shafie El-Guzuuli, p.c., October 2020. -(189) +{{< gloss "(189)" >}} +{g} *loori*,lorry|*weer*,[idf]({sc})|*udud-k-in*,rumble-[plr-3sg]({sc})| +{r} “a lorry rumbles” +{{< /gloss >}} -(190) +{{< gloss "(190)" >}} +{g} *iiɡ*,fire|*aaɡ*,[prog]({sc})|*habab-k-in*,blaze-[plr-3sg]({sc})| +{r} “the fire is blazing” +{{< /gloss >}} Although Massenbach does not address the ‑k-extension in her Mattokki grammar sketch, her dictionary contains some verbs which exhibit *-k,* e.g., *jok-k(i)* “chew”; *kil-ik(i)* “chirp”; *tos-k(i)* “cough”; and *wak-k(i)* “yelp (fox).” The fact that *‑k* often occurs on verbs depicting inherently repetitive events like rumble, blaze, chew, chirp, cough, and yelp indicates that it reflects event plurality. @@ -1282,9 +1430,16 @@ This is also true for Nobiin. Werner’s compilation of Nobiin ideophones contai [^199]: Werner, “Ideophones in Nobiin.” -(191) +{{< gloss "(191)" >}} +{r} **Nobiin** +{g} *áadíi*,hyena|*ùu-k-ín*,howl-[plr-3sg]({sc})| +{r} “the hyena howls” +{{< /gloss >}} -(192) +{{< gloss "(192)" >}} +{g} *kùglúul*,rooster|*kìik-k-ín*,crow-[plr-3sg]({sc})| +{r} “the rooster crows” +{{< /gloss >}} As for Old Nubian, there is no evidence of the stem extension *‑k,* not even in combination with the reduplicated stems of apparently onomatopoeic or ideophonic verbs,[^200] to which *‑k* is often attached in the modern Nile Nubian languages. @@ -1415,9 +1570,15 @@ Cognates of the Tagle intransitive/transitive verb pairs “lie down”/“put d | (209) | jɛ̀r | “lie down, go to sleep!” [itr, imp 2sg]({sc}) | | | ū-júr | “put down!” [tr, imp 2sg]({sc}) | -(210) +{{< gloss "(210)" >}} +{g} *kám-m-bíl*,eat.[plr-lk]({sc})-first|*jɛ̀r*,lie.down.[sng]({sc})| +{r} “eat first then go to sleep!” +{{< /gloss >}} -(211) +{{< gloss "(211)" >}} +{g} *ɕǎnt̪àà=g*,bag=[acc]({sc})|*kúrɕī=ét̪*,chair=[loc]({sc})|*ū-júr*,caus-put.down| +{r} “put the bag on the chair!” +{{< /gloss >}} Because of their phonological and semantic similarities, the Midob verb stems *súkk* “descend” and *ú-kk* “give birth” can be identified are cognates of Nile Nubian *sukk-* “descend” and *u-skir-* “put down, lay down, give birth;” see examples (201) and (203) above. @@ -1487,7 +1648,12 @@ Some verbal extensions have a restricted distribution because they occur only in Unlike the languages of the western branch, the Nile Nubian languages have dedicated passive extensions. They comprise Old Nubian ‑(ⲓ)ⲧⲁⲕ, Nobiin *‑dakk ~ ‑takk ~ ‑daŋ,* Mattokki *‑takk,* and Andaandi *‑katt.* Nobiin and Matokki *‑dakk ~ ‑takk* suggest that Old Nubian ‑ⲧⲁⲕ (although spelled with a single ⲕ), used to be realized with a geminate *kk,* too. -(218) +{{< gloss "(218)" >}} +{r} **Old Nubian** +{r} ⲁ̇ⲉⲧ︥ⲧⲁⲕⲁⲧⲁⲙⲏ +{g} *aeit-tak-a-ta-mē*,insult-[pass-pred-neg-jus.sg]({sc})| +{r} “don’t you be insulted!” (M 6.11) +{{< /gloss >}} Apart from *‑dakk ~ ‑takk,* Nobiin has another passive extension, *-daŋ,* which, according to Reinisch, is restricted to the Fadicca variety.[^224] As far as we know today, it is unattested in Old Nubian.[^225] Both Reinisch and Lepsius provide examples of *‑daŋ* being attached to original Nobiin items and even to borrowings from Arabic as in (220),[^226] which attest the productivity of the extension. Due to the phonetic similarities of *‑daŋ* and the inchoative *‑aŋ,* Reinisch and Lepsius conceive of *‑daŋ* as being composed of a *d*-prefix plus *-aŋ.* According to Reinisch, *d*- has a “reflexive-passive” function.[^227] @@ -1505,21 +1671,35 @@ However, this hypothesis is not convincing unless we can corroborate the existen [^228]: Example from Werner, p.c., October 2020. -(221) +{{< gloss "(221)" >}} +{g} *santee-l*,sabbat-[det]({sc})|*aadem=in=doorro*,man=[gen]({sc})=because.of|*aaw-dakk-on*,do-[pass-pt.3sg]({sc})|*aadem*,man|*santee=n=doorro*,sabbat=[gen]({sc})=because.of|*aaw-daŋ-kum-mun*,do-[pass-pt-neg]({sc})| +{r} “the Sabbath was made for man, not man for the Sabbath” +{{< /gloss >}} As for Mattokki, Massenbach points out that the passive extension is realized as [takk] or, more rarely, as [katt].[^229] [^229]: Massenbach, “Wörterbuch des nubischen Kunûzi-Dialektes,” p. 134. -(222) +{{< gloss "(222)" >}} +{r} **Mattokki** +{g} *buuwe-tákk-imn-um*,call-[pass-neg-prs.3sg]({sc})| +{r} “he is not called” +{{< /gloss >}} Abdel-Hafiz only mentions the *-takk* variant and its allomorph *-cakk* which is used after *c.* It can be used with transitive verbs, but also with intransitive verbs such as neer “sleep.”[^230] [^230]: Abdel-Hafiz, *A Reference Grammar of Kunuz Nubian,* p. 111f. -(223) +{{< gloss "(223)" >}} +{g} *indo*,here|*neer-takk-is-u*,sleep-[pass-pt-3sg]({sc})| +{r} “it was slept here” +{{< /gloss >}} -(224) +{{< gloss "(224)" >}} +{r} **Andaandi** +{g} *goraan*,Qur’an|*kuur-katt-in*,learn-[pass-3sg]({sc})| +{r} “the Qur’an is learnt / the Qur’an can be learnt” +{{< /gloss >}} Both Matokki *‑takk* and Andaandi *‑katt* are productive extensions, as shown by their use with Arabic loanwords.[^233] @@ -1578,19 +1758,43 @@ The plural object extensions *‑ir* and *‑(i)r-ir* are restricted to Mattokki [^250]: Armbruster, *Dongolese Nubian: A Grammar,* §3031ff. Examples from Massenbach, “Wörterbuch des nubischen Kunûzi-Dialektes,” pp. 127–128. -(227) +{{< gloss "(227)" >}} +{r} **Mattokki** +{g} *ai*,[1sg]({sc})|*toog-s-im*,break-[pt2-1sg]({sc})| +{r} “I smashed it” +{{< /gloss >}} -(228) +{{< gloss "(228)" >}} +{g} *ai*,[1sg]({sc})|*toog-ir-s-im*,break-[ploj-pt2-1sg]({sc})| +{r} “I smashed them” +{{< /gloss >}} -(229) +{{< gloss "(229)" >}} +{g} *ar*,[1pl]({sc})|*el-r-un* [ellun],find-[neut-1pl]({sc})| +{r} “we find it” +{{< /gloss >}} -(230) +{{< gloss "(230)" >}} +{g} *ar*,[1pl]({sc})|*el-ir-r-un*,find-[ploj-neut-1pl]({sc})| +{r} “we find them" +{{< /gloss >}} Armbruster observes that Andaandi *‑ir,* which is sometimes reduplicated and realized as [irir], additionally has distributive connotations since it is “used when the verb’s object is a plural that is regarded as a series of singulars.”[^253] But when discussing (231) and (232), mother tongue speaker El-Shafie El-Guzuuli pointed out that he does not perceive a semantic difference between them.[^254] [^253]: Armbruster, *Dongolese Nubian: A Grammar,* §5456. [^254]: El-Guzuuli, p.c., September 2020. +{{< gloss "(231)" >}} +{r} **Andaandi** +{g} *in-gu-gi*,this-[pl=acc]({sc})|*sokke-rir*,take-[ploj]({sc})| +{r} “take each of these away!” +{{< /gloss >}} + +{{< gloss "(232)" >}} +{g} *in-gu-gi*,this-[pl=acc]({sc})|*sokke*,take| +{r} “take each of these away!” +{{< /gloss >}} + Unlike the reduplicated causative *‑ir-ir*-extension, which is realized as [iddi], the reduplicated plural object extension *‑(i)r-ir* is never pronounced as [iddi]. This finding supports Armbruster’s assumption that the plural object extension is not identical in origin with the causative *\*-(i)r*-extension (see [2.1](#21)).[^255] [^255]: Armbruster, *Dongolese Nubian: A Grammar,* §3668. @@ -1615,29 +1819,54 @@ Kauczor also points out that some verbs are always extended by *‑er.* This fin [^258]: Comfort, “Verbal Number in the Uncu Language”; Jakobi & Ibrahim, “Labile Verbs in Tagle”; Pointner, “Verbal Number in Tabaq.” [^261]: In Tagle, the extension is realized as [er] or [ɛr], depending on the ATR feature of the stem vowel. -(233) +{{< gloss "(233)" >}} +{r} **Tagle** +{g} *ɪ̀yɪ̀*,[1sg]({sc})|*ékk-é*,urinate-[pst.1sg]({sc})| +{r} “I urinated” +{{< /gloss >}} -(234) +{{< gloss "(234)" >}} +{g} *àyì*,[1pl]({sc})|*ékk-ér-ó*,urinate-[plr-pst.1pl]({sc})| +{r} “we urinated” +{{< /gloss >}} In a transitive clause, *‑er* refers to the plural object. -(235) +{{< gloss "(235)" >}} +{g} *àyì*,[1pl]({sc})|*kér=gì*,fence.[sg=acc]({sc})|*kíl-ó*,jump-[pst.1pl]({sc})| +{r} “we jumped the fence” +{{< /gloss >}} -(236) +{{< gloss "(236)" >}} +{g} *àyì*,[1pl]({sc})|*kér-nd̪ú=gí*,fence-[pl=acc]({sc})|*kíl-ér-ó*,jump-[plr-pst.1pl]({sc})| +{r} “we jumped the fences” +{{< /gloss >}} The *‑er*-extension also occurs in transitivity alternations. Compare the transitive clause in (237) to the agent-preserving clause in (238) and to the patient-preserving non-basic intransitive clause in (239). -(237) +{{< gloss "(237)" >}} +{g} *íyé-t̪ù*,shepherd-[sg]({sc})|*ēg-ī=gī*,goat-[pl=acc]({sc})|*túy-é-n*,milk-[plr-3]({sc})| +{r} “the shepherd milks the goats” / “the shepherd milks goats” +{{< /gloss >}} -(238) +{{< gloss "(238)" >}} +{g} *íyé-t̪ù*,shepherd-[sg]({sc})|*túy-é-n*,milk-[plr-3]({sc})| +{r} “the shepherd milks” +{{< /gloss >}} -(239) +{{< gloss "(239)" >}} +{g} *ōd̪-d̪ū*,goat-[sg]({sc})|*túy-é-n*,milk-[plr-3]({sc})| +{r} “the goat milks, i.e. produces milk” / “a goat milks, i.e. produces milk” +{{< /gloss >}} Depending on the semantics of the verb and the semantic properties of its arguments, non-basic intransitivity constructions may even have a facilitative or passive reading.[^262] [^262]: Jakobi & Ibrahim, “Labile Verbs in Tagle.” -(240) +{{< gloss "(240)" >}} +{g} *ɪ̀-t̪ʊ̀*,baobab-[sg]({sc})|*dʌ̄ɲɲ-ɛ̄-n*,climb-[plr-3]({sc})| +{r} “the baobab is easy to climb” / “the baobab gets climbed” +{{< /gloss >}} Some transitive and intransitive verbs expressing inherently repetitive events are always marked by the *‑er*-extension, as shown by the following [2sg/2pl]({sc}) imperative forms of Tagle. On these verbs the *‑er*-extension has become lexicalized. @@ -1688,13 +1917,24 @@ Interestingly, the Kordofan Nubian and Midob *‑er*-extension is phonetically a Whereas the Nile Nubian languages and Midob express reciprocal notions lexically, the Kordofan Nubian languages exhibit a productive reciprocal extension which is attached to plural verb stems. Reciprocal constructions are intransitive; for this reason, in Tagle the intransitive past marker is required, *‑(ì)bɛ̀l,* which contrasts with the transitive past marker *‑(í)nàl.* -(255) +{{< gloss "(255)" >}} +{r} **Tagle** +{g} *ínì*,people|*kòn‑nú‑nù=gì*,bird-[sg-dim.sg=acc]({sc})|*ìcí=kɔ̀*,hand=[ins]({sc})|*áŋ‑ínàl‑à-m* [áŋàlàm],seize-[tr.pst-pl-pst.3]({sc})| +{r} “the people seized the bird by hand” +{{< /gloss >}} -(256) +{{< gloss "(256)" >}} +{g} *ínì*,people|*àɲ-c-ìn-ìbɛ̀l-ʌ̀-m*,seize-[plr-rcp-itr.pst-pl-pst.3]({sc})| +{r} “the people seized each other” +{{< /gloss >}} In Karko the reciprocal extension has several allomorphs. Because of its underspecified vowel the extension *‑Vn* adopts the quality of the stem vowel. As in Tagle, the reciprocal is attached to the plural verb stem. In the past it requires the intransitive past marker *-ɲj.* -(257) +{{< gloss "(257)" >}} +{r} **Karko** +{g} *ín*,people|*kwɛ̌ɛ̀=g*,spear.[pl=acc]({sc})|*fɛ́t̪-ɛ́n-ɲj-ɛ̀ɛ̀*,throw.[plr-rcp-itr.pst-3pl]({sc})| +{r} “the people threw spears at each other” +{{< /gloss >}} The Kordofan Nubian reciprocal *‑in*-suffix looks strikingly similar to the Ama dual suffixes *‑ɪ̄n* and *‑ɛ̄n.* According to Norton’s internal reconstruction, Ama *‑ɪ̄n* is the older form, which originates from an old reciprocal suffix.[^269] He also points out that similar reciprocal extensions are attested in several East Sudanic languages. For these reasons, Kordofan Nubian *‑in* and Ama *‑ɪ̄n* can be considered cognates, providing another piece of evidence for the genetic relationship between these languages. So far, we do not know whether Afitti exhibits a comparable extension.[^270] @@ -1732,13 +1972,25 @@ Karko, too, uses various plural stem extensions, including *‑tVg, ‑kVn,* and Like the *‑er*-extension ([6.3](#63)), the suffixes introduced in the present section can mark plural verb stems which are required in transitivity alternations. For this reason, they are glossed just like *‑er* by [plr]({sc}). Here are two pairs of Karko examples contrasting transitive and non-basic intransitive clauses. The latter are illustrated by the agent-preserving clause (269) and the patient-preserving clause (271). -(268) +{{< gloss "(268)" >}} +{g} *ín*,people|*wèè=g*,sorghum=[acc]({sc})|*díg-t-ìg*,gather-[plr-plr]({sc})| +{r} “the people gather the sorghum (ears)” +{{< /gloss >}} -(269) +{{< gloss "(269)" >}} +{g} *ín*,people|*kùld=ūt*,mountain=[loc]({sc})|*díg-t-ìg*,gather-[plr-plr]({sc})| +{r} “the people gather on the mountain” +{{< /gloss >}} -(270) +{{< gloss "(270)" >}} +{g} *íīd̪*,man|*t̪óóɲéè=g*,children=[acc]({sc})|*fɛ̀j-ɛ́k*,wake.up-[plr]({sc})| +{r} “the man wakes the children up” +{{< /gloss >}} -(271) +{{< gloss "(271)" >}} +{g} *t̪óóɲē*,children|*fɛ̀j-ɛ́k*,wake.up-[plr]({sc})| +{r} “the children wake up” +{{< /gloss >}} ## The Kordofan Nubian *‑ad̪-* and Midob *‑át*-Extensions {#66} @@ -1759,9 +2011,26 @@ The *‑ad̪*-extension is a portmanteau morpheme since it cumulatively expresse The Tagle participles are regularly associated with a low tone pattern. The singular forms are marked by complex suffixes composed of the participle marker plus a vowel suffix marking number, *‑ad̪-u ~ -ʌd̪-ʊ* and the plural forms by *‑an-i ~ -ʌn-ɪ.* This means that Tagle participles are double marked for number. The participles can serve as attributive adjectives modifying a noun phrase or as predicative adjectives in copula clauses. -(275) +{{< gloss "(275a)" >}} +{r} **Tagle** +{g} *kɪ́-t̪ʊ́*,door-[sg]({sc})|*èt̪-ìŋk-àd̪-ù*,enter-[plr-ptc.sg-sg]({sc})| +{r} “the closed door” +{{< /gloss >}} -(276) +{{< gloss "(275b)" >}} +{g} *kɪ́-nɪ́*,door-[pl]({sc})|*èt̪-ìŋk-àn-ì*,enter-[plr-ptc.pl-pl]({sc})| +{r} “the closed doors” +{{< /gloss >}} + +{{< gloss "(276a)" >}} +{g} *kɪ̀-t̪ʊ̀*,cloth-[sg]({sc})|*dùy-àd̪-ù-ní* [dùyàdùní],sew-[ptc.sg-sg-cop]({sc})| +{r} “the cloth is sewn” +{{< /gloss >}} + +{{< gloss "(276b)" >}} +{g} *kɪ̀-nɪ̀*,cloth-[pl]({sc})|*dùy-àn-ì-ní*,sew-[ptc.pl-pl-cop]({sc})| +{r} “the clothes are sewn” +{{< /gloss >}} Similar to Tagle, Karko participles are characterized by a low tone pattern. They are inflected for singular by *‑Vd̪* and for plural by *‑Vn,* the vowel *V* adopting the quality of the stem vowel. @@ -1823,13 +2092,27 @@ A phonetically and semantically similar *VC*-shaped extension is attested in Ama [^283]: Norton, “Number in Ama Verbs.” [^284]: ![Norton, this issue](article:norton.md). Examples from Norton, “Number in Ama Verbs,” pp. 77 and 78. -(288) +{{< gloss "(288)" >}} +{r} **Ama** +{g} *ə̀ŋí*,[1pl]({sc})|*bā*,[ver]({sc})|*wùd̪ēŋ*,child|*dɛ̄ɛ́ɪ́*,hit| +{r} “we hit the child” +{{< /gloss >}} -(289) +{{< gloss "(289)" >}} +{g} *ə̀ŋí*,[1pl]({sc})|*bā*,[ver]({sc})|*dɔ̄rɛŋ*,children|*dɛ̄-ɪ́d̪-ɪ́*,hit-[dstr-th]({sc})| +{r} “we hit the children” +{{< /gloss >}} -(290) +{{< gloss "(290)" >}} +{g} *ə̀ŋí*,[1pl]({sc})|*bā*,[ver]({sc})|*tūɽ-íd-è*,cry-[dstr-th]({sc})| +{r} “we (three or more) each cried” +{{< /gloss >}} -(291) +{{< gloss "(291)" >}} +{g} *ə̀ŋí*,[1pl]({sc})| +*bā*,[ver]({sc})|*dɔ̄rɛŋ*,children|*mʊ̄l*,five|*dɛ̄-ɪ́d̪-ɪ́*,hit-[dstr-th]({sc})| +{r} “we hit until we had hit five children” +{{< /gloss >}} Midob is spoken in Darfur and Ama in the Nuba Mountains. In view of the geographical distance between these languages today, (recent) direct borrowing is unlikely. Considering that the non-initial dental *d̪* and the non-initial alveolar *d* may correspond to each other,[^327] the striking semantic and phonetic resemblances between Ama *‑ɪ́d̪* and Midob *‑íd* suggest that these suffixes are cognates. They represent another piece of evidence for the common genetic origins of Ama and the Nubian languages. Unfortunately, as in the case of the causative *‑ɪg*- or *‑ɛg*-suffix and the reciprocal/dual suffix *‑ɪn,* corroborating evidence from Afitti is (still) missing. @@ -1994,7 +2277,6 @@ Kauczor, P. Daniel. *Die bergnubische Sprache (Dialekt von Gebel Deleṅ).* Vien * [gen]({sc}) – genitive; * [excl]({sc}) – exclusive; * [imp]({sc}) – imperative; -* [in]({sc}) – inclusive; * [incl]({sc}) – inclusive; * [ind]({sc}) – indicative; * [inten]({sc}) – intentional; diff --git a/content/article/rilly.md b/content/article/rilly.md index 7302581..0aafc61 100644 --- a/content/article/rilly.md +++ b/content/article/rilly.md @@ -2,12 +2,12 @@ title: "Personal Markers in Meroitic" author: "Claude Rilly" abstract: "" -keywords: "Meroitic, Meroe, Kush, Napata, pronouns, Egyptian, decipherment, verbal morphology, pronominal morphology, person, comparative linguistics, Old Nubian, Nobiin, Andaandi, Nyimang, Nara, Taman, Mattokki, Karko" +keywords: "Meroitic, Meroe, Kush, Napata, pronouns, Egyptian, decipherment, verbal morphology, pronominal morphology, person, comparative linguistics, Old Nubian, Nobiin, Andaandi, Ama, Nara, Taman, Mattokki, Karko" --- # Introduction {#intro} -Meroitic was the language spoken by the elite of the successive kingdoms of Ancient Sudan since at least the second millennium BC.[^x0] Only from the third century BC was it written with a script borrowed from Demotic. Later, a second script, using the same writing system but with hieroglyphic signs, was created for the sacred texts, particularly the wall inscriptions of the temples. The two scripts were deciphered in 1911.[^x1] Approximately 2,000 texts have been published so far. The main issue with regard to Meroitic inscriptions is the understanding of their content. The language disappeared in the early Middle Ages without descendants. +Meroitic was the language spoken by the elite of the successive kingdoms of Ancient Sudan since at least the second millennium BCE.[^x0] Only from the third century BCE was it written with a script borrowed from Demotic. Later, a second script, using the same writing system but with hieroglyphic signs, was created for the sacred texts, particularly the wall inscriptions of the temples. The two scripts were deciphered in 1911.[^x1] Approximately 2,000 texts have been published so far. The main issue with regard to Meroitic inscriptions is the understanding of their content. The language disappeared in the early Middle Ages without descendants. [^x0]: I am grateful to Abbie Hantgan-Sonko for checking the English text. [^x1]: Griffith, *Karanòg.* @@ -20,7 +20,7 @@ Internal methods have been used since 1911 to investigate the meaning of the tex * Nubian, comprising Nobiin, Andaandi (Dongolawi), and Mattokki (Kenzi) spoken in Egypt in Sudan; Midob, (nearly) extinct Birgid, and the Kordofan Nubian (Ajang) languages in Sudan; * Nara, a small language spoken in Western Eritrea; * Taman, comprising Tama and Mararit, in Darfur and Chad; -* Nyima, comprising Nyimang (Ama) and Afitti in the Nuba Mountains in central Sudan. +* Nyima, comprising Ama and Afitti in the Nuba Mountains in central Sudan. Nubian and Nara are closest to Meroitic, yet unfortunately neither is close enough to allow for a quick and straightforward comparison of vocabulary and morphology. The split between the different branches of NES is supposed to have occurred in early third millennium BCE,[^x3] so that the chronological depth between the NES sister-languages is comparable to the time gap that separates Indo-European languages. For that reason, the comparative method must not be used alone, but in combination with internal methods. @@ -56,19 +56,30 @@ A last peculiarity, pertaining rather to phonetic changes than to spelling conve Among the possible markers of the third person, only pronouns are known so far, namely *qo/qe* and variants for singular and *qoleb* for plural. No verbal ending that could be connected with the third person, such as Latin *-t/-nt* or Egyptian *=f/=sn,* has been spotted in the texts. The case of the “verbal dative” will be later investigated, but this morpheme is probably to be classified as a clitic pronoun. -In the paradigm of personal pronouns, the 3rd person has a special place. Whereas the 1st and 2nd persons refer to the protagonists of the uttering situation (see n. 1 [CHECK]), the 3rd person refers to people and things that are outside this situation. According to the relevant categorization of Arab grammarians, the 3rd person is “the absentee."[^7] From this perspective, 3rd person pronouns are close to demonstratives. This is particularly obvious when it comes to morphology. In many languages, these pronouns are derived from demonstratives. In Romance languages for example, they stem from the Latin distal demonstrative *ille* “that”, for instance French *il* “he”, Spanish *él,* Romanian *el.* Some languages even use the same word for the demonstrative and the 3rd person pronoun.[^8] In Latin, the proximal demonstrative *is, ea, id* “this” was used as a 3rd person pronoun. In Turkish, a language that display a full range of typological similarities with Meroitic,[^9] the same demonstrative *o* is used as a demonstrative adjective, a demonstrative pronoun and a 3rd person pronoun (Creissels 2006: 91). This seems also to be the case in Meroitic, which has apparently the same word, *qo/qe,* for “this” (adjective), “this” (pronoun), and “he”, “she”, “it.” +In the paradigm of personal pronouns, the 3rd person has a special place. Whereas the 1st and 2nd persons refer to the protagonists of the uttering situation (see n. 1 [CHECK]), the 3rd person refers to people and things that are outside this situation. According to the relevant categorization of Arab grammarians, the 3rd person is “the absentee."[^7] From this perspective, 3rd person pronouns are close to demonstratives. This is particularly obvious when it comes to morphology. In many languages, these pronouns are derived from demonstratives. In Romance languages for example, they stem from the Latin distal demonstrative *ille* “that”, for instance French *il* “he”, Spanish *él,* Romanian *el.* Some languages even use the same word for the demonstrative and the 3rd person pronoun.[^8] In Latin, the proximal demonstrative *is, ea, id* “this” was used as a 3rd person pronoun. In Turkish, a language that display a full range of typological similarities with Meroitic,[^9] the same demonstrative *o* is used as a demonstrative adjective, a demonstrative pronoun and a 3rd person pronoun (Creissels 2006: 91). This seems also to be the case in Meroitic, which has apparently the same word, *qo/qe,* for “this” (adjective), “this” (pronoun), and “he”, “she”, “it.”[^ex2] [^7]: In Arabic *ghâ‘ib,* cf. Cotte, *Langage et linéarité,* p. 130. [^8]: In addition to Latin, this feature can be found in Korean, Hindi, Panjabi, Marathi, Mongolian, etc. See Jacquesson, *Les personnes,* pp. 103-105. [^9]: These similarities are due to common typological features and do not originate from a common genealogical origin. Turkish is, like Meroitic or Nubian, an agglutinative language, with no grammatical gender and an SOV word-order, cf. Rilly, *La langue du Royaume de Méroé,* pp. 497-502. +[^ex2]: In (2), Malutuna is traditionally transcribed “Maloton.” This viceroy of Lower Nubia (*peseto*), living at the end of the 3rd century CE, is famous for his beautiful *ba* statue kept in the Nubian Museum in Aswan. ## Demonstrative Pronoun or Independent Third Person Pronoun Object? {#ii1} -(1) +{{< gloss "(1)" >}} +{r} **Meroitic** +{g} *Arilnemkse*,Arilanemakas|***q(o)***-*o*,this-[cop]({sc})| +{r} “This is Arilanemakas.” (REM 0239A, epitaph) +{{< /gloss >}} -(2) +{{< gloss "(2)" >}} +{g} *Mloton*,Malutuna|***q(o)***-*o-wi :*,this-[cop-emp]({sc})| +{r} “This is Malutuna.” (REM 0277, epitaph) +{{< /gloss >}} -(3) +{{< gloss "(3)" >}} +{g} ***qo***:,this|*Atqo*,Ataqu|***q(o)***-*o-wi :*,this-[cop-emp]({sc})| +{r} “This (one), this is Ataqu.” (REM 1057, epitaph) +{{< /gloss >}} The pronoun *qo* was among the first elements that Griffith singled out in the funerary inscriptions after his decipherment of the script.[^x5] The word occurred in final position in the “nomination” of the deceased, either bare (1) or followed by an optional particle *-wi* “for emphasis” (2).[^11] Quite often, another *qo* preceded the name of the deceased (3). Griffith suggested that this first *qo* was an epithet meaning “honorable” or “noble” and the final *qo* was a grammatical tool “to introduce the name of the deceased.” In his *Beiträge zur meroitischen Grammatik,* Hintze was the first to regard *qo* as a demonstrative pronoun.[^x505] According to him, the original form of this word was *qe* and the predicative compound *qo(wi)* was composed of *qe* + copula *-o* ± particle *-wi.* Actually, *qe* is a variant spelling of *qo* and the two forms were pronounced /ku/,[^12] so that *qo(wi)* can be analysed also as *qo* + copula *-o* ± particle *-wi* with a merger of the two consecutive *o*’s. The additional *qo* at the beginning (3), found in 10% of the epitaphs, is used as a topic “this one, this is….”[^13] It emphasizes the deixis that connects the inscription and the deceased, since these texts were inscribed on offering-tables or stelae that were placed at the entrance and inside the funerary chapels respectively. @@ -78,53 +89,76 @@ The pronoun *qo* was among the first elements that Griffith singled out in the f [^12]: The frequent variants *qe/qo* here and in other words (for example *Aqedise/Aqodise* “Moon-god” in the texts from the Lion temple in Naga) is best explained by the labialized articulation /kʷ/ of the sign *q*: see Rilly, *La langue du Royaume de Méroé,* pp. 374-379. [^13]: See Rilly, *La langue du Royaume de Méroé,* p. 547. The literal translation “this one, this is...,” which is used above, is somewhat unnatural in English. In spoken French, the topicalization of the subject is overwhelmingly frequent and sentences such as *celui-ci, c’est…* or even *ça, c’est…,* literally “this, this is” are very common. -(4) +{{< gloss "(4)" >}} +{g} *kdi*,woman|***qo***:,this|*Mitslbe*,Mitasalabe|*q(o)-o-wi :*,this-[cop-emp]({sc})| +{r} “This woman, this is Mitasalabe.” (REM 0088, epitaph) +{{< /gloss >}} -(5) +{{< gloss "(5)" >}} +{g} *wle*,dog|***qo***,this|*p-xn*,[caus]({sc})-yield(?)|*tlt*,talent|*3*,3|*Netror-se-l-o*,Natarura-[gen-det-cop]({sc})| +{r} “May this dog yield(?) three talents, it is Natarura’s.” (REM 1165, beside graffito of a greyhound) +{{< /gloss >}} Another function of *qo,* which confirms the demonstrative status of this word, is adjectival. Like in English or German, the same word is used for the adjective and the pronoun. In (4), also drawn from a funerary text, the topic found in (3) is extended: *qo* “this one” becomes *kdi qo* “this woman”, “this lady.” This interpretation, which I first advanced with some reservations,[^x6] was since then confirmed: (5), (6), and (7) are captions of pictures, respectively the graffito of a dog hunting a hare in the Great Enclosure of Musawwarat, the drawing of a gazelle on a wooden board found in the temple of Amun in Qasr Ibrim and a pair of feet engraved in the temple of Isis in Philae. The deictic nature of *qo* is perfectly obvious here. Its use as a 3rd person pronoun in Meroitic is therefore an extension of his function, because the other way round, namely that a personal pronoun could become a demonstrative, is cross-linguistically highly improbable. [^x6]: Rilly, *La langue du Royaume de Méroé,* p. 98. -(6) +{{< gloss "(6)" >}} +{g} *abese*,gazelle|***qo-li***,this-[det]({sc})| +{r} “This gazelle…” (REM 1198 and 1199) The rest of the sentence cannot yet be translated. +{{< /gloss >}} -(7) +{{< gloss "(7)" >}} +{g} *ste*,foot|***qo-leb***,this-[det.pl]({sc})|*Addo*[.]-*se*,Adadu[.]-[gen]({sc})| +{r} “These feet (are) Adadu[.]’s.” (REM 0113) +{{< /gloss >}} Examples (6) and (7) show that the demonstrative adjective *qo* is compatible with the use of the determiner (article), singular *-l(i),* plural *-leb,* unlike English or French, but like Greek[^15] or Hungarian. It is, however, absent in some instances, such as (5) above. [^15]: Ancient Greek οὖτος ὁ ἀνήρ “this man,” literally “this the man”. -In these examples, the determiner is apparently attached, not to the demonstrative, but to the noun phrase as a whole, as is normal in Meroitic.[^x7] However, a plural form *qoleb*[^16] can be found independently as a pronoun object, but, from the instances found so far, it is difficult to decide if it is a demonstrative or a personal pronoun. This form is particularly attested in royal chronicles. +In these examples, the determiner is apparently attached, not to the demonstrative, but to the noun phrase as a whole, as is normal in Meroitic.[^x7] However, a plural form *qoleb*[^16] can be found independently as a pronoun object, but, from the instances found so far, it is difficult to decide if it is a demonstrative or a personal pronoun. This form is particularly attested in royal chronicles.[^ex8] [^x7]: Rilly, *La langue du Royaume de Méroé,* p. 511. -[^16]: From the textual material so far available, the adjunction of the plural determiner *-leb* seems to be the only way to build the plural of nouns. For an alternative plural *qebe-,* see [§3.2](#ii2). +[^16]: From the textual material so far available, the adjunction of the plural determiner *-leb* seems to be the only way to build the plural of nouns. For an alternative plural *qebe-,* see [3.2](#ii2). +[^ex8]: In (8), the titles *ssmrte* and *wtotrse* cannot yet be translated. The former is probably an early form of the title *ssimete* frequently attested in later texts and which is connected to the cult of the gods in several instances. The second one is a hapax legomenon. It is presumably a compound word (*wto-tr-se*) including possibly an indirect genitive with postposition *-se*. -(8) +{{< gloss "(8)" >}} +{g} *Atnene :*,Atanene|*ssmrte-l :*,(title)-[det]({sc})|*Imlotror :*,Imalutarura|*wtotrse-l :*,(title)-[det]({sc})|***qoleb*** *:*,[3pl]({sc})|*Amnp :*,(to) Amanap|*i-de-bx :*,[1sg.s]({sc})-give(?)-[3pl.o]({sc})| +{r} “Atanene, the *ssmrte* (and) Imalutarura, the *wtotrse*, I gave(?) them to Amanap.” (REM 1044/25–26) +{{< /gloss >}} Example (8) is quoted from the great stela of king Taneyidamani kept in Boston. Engraved around 150 BCE, it is the earliest royal chronicle written in Meroitic. The excerpt deals with the assignment to the temple of Amanap (Amun of Napata) of two officials, Atanene and Imalutarura. Their names and titles are enumerated and followed by *qoleb.* The context is utterly different from (7), where the deixis is obvious, since it is engraved beside the image of two feet. As in (3) and (4), we are doubtlessly dealing with a topicalized construction. The topic is formed by the names and the description of the two officials, whereas *qoleb* is an anaphoric pronoun that refers to these two persons, but operates as the actual object of the verb.[^18] In anaphoras referring to animate antecedents as shown in (8), most languages where demonstratives and 3rd person pronouns are clearly distinct, a personal pronoun is used. In Meroitic, it seems that *qoleb,* at least when it is the object of the verb, can function as a personal pronoun. Unfortunately, there are no similar instances, namely in sentences with verbs, with the singular *qo,* but the non-verbal sentence in (3) suggests that it would function similarly. In the latter example, the first *qo* plays the role of a deictic whereas the second *qo* assumes the function of an anaphoric. -[^18]: The final element *-bx* in (8), which could be considered as the object of the verb, is discussed in [§3.3](#ii3). +[^18]: The final element *-bx* in (8), which could be considered as the object of the verb, is discussed in [3.3](#ii3). ## The Third Person Possessive Pronoun {#ii2} -Whereas Hintze regarded *qe/qo* as a demonstrative, Hofmann held it as a personal pronoun because it is the basis of the 3rd person possessive marker, *qese* and variants.[^x8] It is found mainly after the kinship terms, as in (9) below, drawn from a funerary stela where two brothers are commemorated. +Whereas Hintze regarded *qe/qo* as a demonstrative, Hofmann held it as a personal pronoun because it is the basis of the 3rd person possessive marker, *qese* and variants.[^x8] It is found mainly after the kinship terms, as in (9) below, drawn from a funerary stela where two brothers are commemorated.[^ex9] [^x8]: Hofmann, *Material für eine meroitische Grammatik,* pp. 334-338. +[^ex9]: In (9), the kinship term *yetmde* is applied to younger members of the same maternal line (Rilly, *La langue du Royaume de Méroé,* 526-527). It mostly designates “nephews” and “nieces,” who are referring to a prestigious uncle in the descriptive part of their epitaph, but in rare cases such as this one, it can be applied to a younger brother. -(9) +{{< gloss "(9)" >}} +{g} *Qoreqore-l-o-wi* [:,Qurqurla-[cop-emp]({sc})|*y*]*etmde*,relative|***qe-se*** *:*,[3sg-gen]({sc})|*Qoretkr*,Qurtakara|*q(o)-o-wi :*,this-[cop-emp]({sc})| +{r} “(This) is Qurqurla; this is his elder Qurtakara.” (REM 0273/2–4, funerary stela) +{{< /gloss >}} The possessive of the 3rd person singular includes the pronoun *qo/qe,* followed by the genitival postposition *-se* and means literally “of him/her.”[^x9] Once again, it can be compared with Latin demonstrative *is, ea, id,* whose genitive *eius* is also used as a 3rd person singular possessive. Three variants are known: *qose,* very rare, *eqese* in REM 1003, and *aqese,* much more common.[^20] Unexpectedly, the 3rd person plural possessive is not *\*qolebse,* but *qebese,* as can be seen in (10), drawn from an epitaph from Gebel Adda that was written for a deceased whose relatives were administrators and scribes from the temple of Isis. Like (3) and (4) above, the sentence includes a topicalized constituent. The genitival phrase (i.e., the officials of the temple) is the topic and is referred to in the predication by the anaphoric possessive *qebese* (their nephew). [^x9]: Rilly, *La langue du Royaume de Méroé,* pp. 550-551. [^20]: The initial *a* in *aqese* and in the variants of the 3rd plural possessive, *aqebese* and *aqobese* are unexplained. It is possible that this *a* is etymological and that, in this case, the forms *qese* and *qebese* result from apheresis (a widespread development in Meroitic, see Rilly, *La langue du Royaume de Méroé,* pp. 290-291). In some instances, however, a non-etymological *a* is added at the beginning of a word for unknown reasons, for example *Ams-i* “oh (sun-god) Masha” in REM 0091C instead of expected *Ms-i.* -(10) +{{< gloss "(10)" >}} +{g} *perite :*,agent|*Wos-se-leb :*,Isis-[gen-det.pl]({sc})|*qorene*,royal.scribe|*Wos-se-leb :*,Isis-[gen-det.pl]({sc})|*yetmde*,nephew|***qe-be-se***-*l-o-wi :*,[3-pl-gen-det-cop-emp]({sc})| +{r} “He was the nephew of agents of Isis and royal scribes (?) of Isis." (GA. 04, epitaph) +{{< /gloss >}} The possessive *qebe-se* includes *qebe-,* a plural form of *qo* that is more conservative than *qoleb,* but is, unlike the latter, never attested in isolation. It includes the plural suffix *-b* that can also be found on the plural determiner:[^x10] [^x10]: Rilly, *Le méroïtique et sa famille linguistique,* p. 389. ->Determiner: singular *-l* → plural *-le__b__* / Pronoun: singular *-qo/-qe* → plural *qe__b__e-* +>Determiner: singular *-l* → plural *-le****b*** / Pronoun: singular *-qo/-qe* → plural *qe****b****e-* *Qebese* has several variants, *aqebese,* *aqobese* (see n. 20 [CHECK]) *eqebese,* and especially *bese,* which is frequent. This last form, in all likelihood, is not an abbreviated variant but is based on a still earlier form of the 3rd person pronoun, *-b,* which will be considered below [ADD REF]. @@ -134,45 +168,85 @@ The funerary inscriptions from the Karanog and Shablul cemeteries were the first [^21]: A third formula for “a good meal” is oftentimes added. A dozen of additional formulae are known, but they are less frequent. See Rilly, *La langue du Royaume de Méroé,* pp. 163-183; Rilly, *Le méroïtique et sa famille linguistique,* pp. 68-74. -(11) +{{< gloss "(11)" >}} +{r} Formula A, singular beneficiary +{g} *ato*,water|*mhe*,plentiful|*pso-he-(xe)-k(e)te*,[caus]({sc})-drink-[3sg.o-opt.2pl]({sc})| +{r} “May you cause him/her to drink plentiful water!” +{{< /gloss >}} -(12) +{{< gloss "(12)" >}} +{r} Formula A, plural beneficiary +{g} *ato*,water|*mhe*,plentiful|*pso-he-bxe-k(e)te*,[caus]({sc})-drink-[3pl.o-opt.2pl]({sc})| +{r} “May you cause them to drink plentiful water!” +{{< /gloss >}} -(13) +{{< gloss "(13)" >}} +{r} Formula B, singular beneficiary +{g} *at*,bread|*mhe*,plentiful|*psi-xr-(xe)-k(e)te*,[caus]({sc})-eat-[3sg.o-opt.2pl]({sc})| +{r} “May you cause him/her to eat plentiful bread!” +{{< /gloss >}} -(14) +{{< gloss "(14)" >}} +{r} Formula B, plural beneficiary +{g} *at*,bread|*mhe*,plentiful|*psi-xr-bxe-k(e)te*,[caus]({sc})-eat-[3pl.o-opt.2pl]({sc})| +{r} “May you cause them to eat plentiful bread!” +{{< /gloss >}} Meroitic is an agglutinative language, but it has a strong propensity to assimilative processes that blur the boundaries between successive morphemes.[^22] However, Griffith managed to identify the element *-bx* or *-bxe* as a “plural ending in the funerary formulae”, which appeared each time several individuals were commemorated in the same epitaph.[^23] In his *Beiträge,* Hintze was the first to suggest a plausible segmentation of these verbal compounds.[^24] He showed that *-bxe* (which, meanwhile, had been termed “dative infix”) had a singular counterpart *-x* or *-xe*[^25] that was theoretically present in the verbal compound, but concealed by a nearly systematic assimilation to the following suffix.[^26] Only in the archaic versions of formulae A and B (15)–(16) was this singular “infix” visible. [^22]: See Comrie, *Language Universals and Linguistic Typology,* pp. 43-19 for an updated interpretation of this old classification of languages. [^23]: Griffith, *Karanòg,* p. 14 and n. 1, pp. 25-26, 45. [^24]: Hintze, “Beiträge zur meroitischen Grammatik,” pp. 65-66, 73-74. -[^25]: The form *-x* (= /xa/ or /ŋa/) and *-bx* (= /baxa/ or /baŋa/) are early. They later became *-xe* (= /x/ or /ŋ/) and *-bxe* (= /bax/ or /baŋ/). It is noted that the sign transliterated *e* can have a zero-vowel value (see [§3](#i) for the principles of the Meroitic script). +[^25]: The form *-x* (= /xa/ or /ŋa/) and *-bx* (= /baxa/ or /baŋa/) are early. They later became *-xe* (= /x/ or /ŋ/) and *-bxe* (= /bax/ or /baŋ/). It is noted that the sign transliterated *e* can have a zero-vowel value (see [3](#i) for the principles of the Meroitic script). [^26]: The suffixes *-xe* and *-bxe* end with the consonant /x/, which assimilated to the subsequent suffix *-ke.* However, similar assimilation is rare with the plural suffix *-bxe.* In early texts, the suffixes were *-x* and *-bx,* with default vowel /a/. This final vowel explains why there was no assimilation with the following suffix. -(15) +{{< gloss "(15)" >}} +{r} Formula A (archaic) +{g} *ato*,water|*mlo*,good|*el-x-te*,give-[3sg.o-opt]({sc})| +{r} “May you give him/her plentiful water!” (REM 0427) +{{< /gloss >}} -(16) +{{< gloss "(16)" >}} +{r} Formula B (archaic) +{g} *at*,bread|*mlo*,good|*el-x-te*,give-[3sg.o-opt]({sc})| +{r} “May you give him/her plentiful bread!” (REM 0427) +{{< /gloss >}} The same wording occurs in the prayers to the gods that were engraved near their figures in votive stelae (17) or in Meroitic temples (18). In the latter example, cited from the Lion temple in Naga, the beneficiaries are the king, his mother, and the prince. -(17) +{{< gloss "(17)" >}} +{g} *A*[*pe*]*dem*[*k-i*],Apedemak-[voc]({sc})|*Tneyidmni*,Taneyidamani|*pwrite*,life|*el-x-te*,give-[3sg.o-opt]({sc})| +{r} “O Apedemak! May you give life to Taneyidamani!” (REM 0405) +{{< /gloss >}} -(18) +{{< gloss "(18)" >}} +{g}*Apedemk-i*,Apedemak-[voc]({sc})|*pwrite :*,life|*l-bx-te*,give-[3pl.o-opt]({sc})| +{r} “O Apedemak! May you give life to them!” (REM 0018) +{{< /gloss >}} ### Earlier Hypotheses {#ii31} -In an early analysis of these sentences,[^x11] I interpreted this “dative infix” as an applicative suffix, with reference to Kanuri, a Saharan language. Applicatives are used to encode a beneficiary of the action in the verb, instead of adding an adposition or a case ending to the noun. They are quite common among African languages and are for example found in Nubian.[^27] However, this can hardly apply to the Meroitic construction. The applicative is a voice, such as passive and causative, and the affixes it uses cannot convey the notions of singular or plural. Example (19) from a Bantu language, Tswana,[^28] shows that the same applicative suffix *-el* is used regardless of the beneficiaries’ number. +In an early analysis of these sentences,[^x11] I interpreted this “dative infix” as an applicative suffix, with reference to Kanuri, a Saharan language. Applicatives are used to encode a beneficiary of the action in the verb, instead of adding an adposition or a case ending to the noun. They are quite common among African languages and are for example found in Nubian.[^27] However, this can hardly apply to the Meroitic construction. The applicative is a voice, such as passive and causative, and the affixes it uses cannot convey the notions of singular or plural. Example (19) from a Bantu language, Tswana, shows that the same applicative suffix *-el* is used regardless of the beneficiaries’ number.[^28] [^x11]: Rilly, *La langue du Royaume de Méroé,* pp. 553-554. [^27]: Jakobi, “Verbal Number and Transitivity in Karko," pp. 121-122 and n. 3. Nile Nubian (Nobiin and Mattokki/Andaandi) uses applicative suffixes that are nothing but a grammaticalized forms of the two verbs “to give,” *deen* and *tir.* In other languages, they may result from the incorporation of adpositions in the verbal compound, as is the case in Amharic (Creissels, *Syntaxe générale 1,* p. 79). -[^28]: Adapted from Creissels, *Syntaxe générale 1,* pp. 74, 76. In (19c), the added gloss “s3:1” means “subject 3rd person, Bantu nominal class 1.” +[^28]: Adapted from Creissels, *Syntaxe générale 1,* pp. 74, 76. In (19c), the added gloss “3:1.s” means “subject 3rd person, Bantu nominal class 1.” -(19a) +{{< gloss "(19a)" >}} +{r} **Tswana** +{g} *ke*,[1sg.s]({sc})|*rek-a*,buy-[fin]({sc})|*ditlhako*,shoes| +{r} “I am buying shoes.” +{{< /gloss >}} -(19b) +{{< gloss "(19b)" >}} +{g} *ke*,[1sg.s]({sc})|*rek-el-a*,buy-[appl-fin]({sc})|*bana*,children|*ditlhako*,shoes| +{r} “I am buying shoes.” +{{< /gloss >}} -(19c) +{{< gloss "(19c)" >}} +{g} *Lorato*,Lorato|*o*,[3:1.s]({sc})|*tlaa*,[fut]({sc})|*kwal-el-a*,write-[appl-fin]({sc})|*Kitso*,Kitso|*lokwalo*,letter| +{r} “Lorato writes a letter to Kitso.” +{{< /gloss >}} In (19b), the beneficiary is plural (*bana* “children”, sg. *ngwana*), whereas in (19c), *lokwalo* “letter” is singular. In both cases, the applicative suffix is *-el.* The Meroitic suffixes *-x* and *-bx,* by contrast, agree in number with the beneficiary. @@ -180,47 +254,69 @@ In addition, this morpheme was first identified as a beneficiary marker from the [^x12]: Carrier, "La stèle méroïtique d’Abratoye." -(20) +{{< gloss "(20)" >}} +{r} **Meroitic** +{g} *kdi*,woman|*mdxe*,virgin|*35*,35|*anese*,donkey|*25 :*,25|*kelw :*,also|∅-*arohe-bx*,[1sg.s]({sc})-take.control-[3pl.o]({sc})| +{r} “I took control of 35 virgins and 25 donkeys.” (REM 1333/16) +{{< /gloss >}} For these two reasons, in a later analysis,[^13] I considered *-x(e)* and *-bx(e)* to be object personal pronouns that had been incorporated into the verbal compound as clitics. A similar enclisis can be found, for instance, in the imperative forms of Romance languages,[^x14] especially in Spanish: *dámelo* “give it to me”, *presentémonos* “let us introduce ourselves.” [^x13]: Rilly, *Le méroïtique et sa famille linguistique,* pp. 395-398. [^x14]: Jacquesson, *Les personnes,* pp. 297-298. -This analysis, however, does not account for the location of these so-called clitic personal markers inside the verbal compound. In the examples from Spanish above, they occur in final position, as is expected for external elements that were later added to a fully inflected form. In Meroitic, as can be seen in (11)-(18), they are directly attached to the verbal stem and followed by the subject person marker and tense–aspect–mood (TAM) endings. For that reason it was termed “infix” and not “suffix.” +This analysis, however, does not account for the location of these so-called clitic personal markers inside the verbal compound. In the examples from Spanish above, they occur in final position, as is expected for external elements that were later added to a fully inflected form. In Meroitic, as can be seen in (11)–(18), they are directly attached to the verbal stem and followed by the subject person marker and tense–aspect–mood (TAM) endings. For that reason it was termed “infix” and not “suffix.” ### Verbal Number Markers in Northern East Sudanic {#ii32} -The unexpected location of *-x(e)* and *-bx(e)* in the verbal complex can be compared with that of the verbal number marker in two groups of the NES linguistic family, Nyima and Nubian. In these languages, the plurality of the subject in intransitive constructions and of the object in transitive constructions (“ergative pattern”) is realized by the same verbal suffix which is added directly to the verbal stem, before the TAM suffixes. The clearest instances of this construction are found in Nyimang and involve an ergative-pattern verbal plural marker[^29] *-(ì)d̪ì* as shown in (21)-(22). +The unexpected location of *-x(e)* and *-bx(e)* in the verbal complex can be compared with that of the verbal number marker in two groups of the NES linguistic family, Nyima and Nubian. In these languages, the plurality of the subject in intransitive constructions and of the object in transitive constructions (“ergative pattern”) is realized by the same verbal suffix which is added directly to the verbal stem, before the TAM suffixes. The clearest instances of this construction are found in the Nyima language Ama and involve an ergative-pattern verbal plural marker[^29] *-(ì)d̪ì* as shown in (21)-(22). -[^29]: An in-depth analysis of this construction in Nyimang can be found in Norton, "Number in Ama Verbs." This author prefers to speak of “distributive” rather than “plural” (ibid., 78). His stance is supported by a series of five examples, which can be nonetheless analysed as a particular case of plural construction. In her study of verbal plural in Nubian, Jakobi states that “verbal number – realized by distinct singular and plural verb stems – can have both aspectual and morphosyntactic functions. On the one hand these stems may encode habitual, progressive, iterative, repetitive, distributive, or even single events, on the other hand these stems may encode the participants affected by these events” (Jakobi, “Verbal Number and Transitivity in Karko," p. 117). +[^29]: An in-depth analysis of this construction in Ama can be found in Norton, "Number in Ama Verbs." This author prefers to speak of “distributive” rather than “plural” (ibid., 78). His stance is supported by a series of five examples, which can be nonetheless analysed as a particular case of plural construction. In her study of verbal plural in Nubian, Jakobi states that “verbal number – realized by distinct singular and plural verb stems – can have both aspectual and morphosyntactic functions. On the one hand these stems may encode habitual, progressive, iterative, repetitive, distributive, or even single events, on the other hand these stems may encode the participants affected by these events” (Jakobi, “Verbal Number and Transitivity in Karko," p. 117). -(21a) kùd̪ū t̪èbīò bà nɛ̀ +{{< gloss "(21a)" >}} +{r} **Ama** +{g} *kùd̪ū*,goat|*t̪èbīò*,black|*bà*,[asp]({sc})|*nɛ̀*,be.[impfv]({sc})| +{r} “The goat is black.” +{{< /gloss >}} -(21b) kùd̪ū t̪èbīò bà nɛ̀-d̪ì +{{< gloss "(21b)" >}} +{g} *kùd̪ū*,goat|*t̪èbīò*,black|*bà*,[asp]({sc})|*nɛ̀-d̪ì*,be.[ipfv-vnm]({sc})| +{r} “The goats are black.” +{{< /gloss >}} -(22a) á bá dámì-ɔ̄ tàm +{{< gloss "(22a)" >}} +{g} *á*,[1sg]({sc})|*bá*,[asp]({sc})|*dámì-ɔ̄*,egg-[acc]({sc})|*tàm*,eat.[ipfv]({sc})| +{r} “I am eating an egg.” +{{< /gloss >}} -(22b) á bá dámì-ɔ̄ tàm-īd̪ì +{{< gloss "(22b)" >}} +{g} *á*,[1sg]({sc})|*bá*,[asp]({sc})|*dámì-ɔ̄*,egg-[acc]({sc})|*tàm-īd̪ì*,eat.[ipfv-vnm]({sc})| +{r} “I am eating an egg.” +{{< /gloss >}} -In Old Nubian and Nobiin, this suffix is *-(i)j.* A related marker *-j-* is found in Midob (Werner 1993: 49). In Kordofan Nubian, a similar suffix *-c* is attested along with others suffixes, such as *-Vr,* which is much more frequent. Recent publications showed that the Nubian suffixes function according to the same ergative pattern as the Nyimang suffix.[^31] Example (23) illustrates the use of the suffix to mark subject plurality with intransitive verbs, whereas examples (24)-(25) (id.: 64) show the suffix marking object plurality with transitive verbs. +In Old Nubian and Nobiin, this suffix is *-(i)j.* A related marker *-j-* is found in Midob (Werner 1993: 49). In Kordofan Nubian, a similar suffix *-c* is attested along with others suffixes, such as *-Vr,* which is much more frequent. Recent publications showed that the Nubian suffixes function according to the same ergative pattern as the Ama suffix.[^31] Example (23) illustrates the use of the suffix to mark subject plurality with intransitive verbs, whereas examples (24)–(25) (id.: 64) show the suffix marking object plurality with transitive verbs.[^ex23] [^30]: *-V* stands here for “vowel”. See Jakobi, “Verbal Number and Transitivity in Karko," pp. 117-122 for Old Nubian, Nobiin, and Mattokki–Andaandi. In the latter group, *-(i)j* is only a pluractional marker whereas the plural marker (only for objects) is *-ir.* For *-c* as a verbal number marker in Tagle, a Kordofan Nubian language, see Jakobi, Ibrahim \& Ibrahim Gulfan, “Verbal Number and Grammatical Relations in Tagle,” exx. 5-6, 19, 20. [^31]: The suffix *-(i)j* is mentioned in Van Gerven Oei, *A Reference Grammar of Old Nubian,* §13.1 who calls it "pluractional" and in Werner 1989: 173-175, who speaks of “plural object extension” but not of plural subject marking. Recent and more explicit studies are Khalil, “The Verbal Plural Marker in Nobiin," Jakobi 2017, and Jakobi et al., forthcoming. +[^ex23]: Examples from Khalil, “The Verbal Plural Marker in Nobiin,” p. 65, ex. 9; p. 64, exx. 3, 4. -(23) [^ex23] +{{< gloss "(23)" >}} +{r} **Nobiin** +{g} *ter*,[3pl]({sc})|*balee-la*,wedding-[loc]({sc})|*kar-j-is-an* [kaccisan],came-[vnm-prt1-3pl]({sc})| +{r} “They came to the wedding.” +{{< /gloss >}} -[^ex23]: Khalil, “The Verbal Plural Marker in Nobiin,” p. 65, ex. 9. +{{< gloss "(24)" >}} +{g} *ay*,[1sg]({sc})|*tii-ga*,cow-[acc]({sc})|*aag*,[prog]({sc})|*jurr-il*,milk-[prs.1sg]({sc})| +{r} “I am milking the cow.” +{{< /gloss >}} -(24) [^ex24] +{{< gloss "(25)" >}} +{g} *ay*,[1sg]({sc})|*tii-guu-ga*,cow-[pl-acc]({sc})|*aag*,[prog]({sc})|*jurr-ij-il*,milk-[vnm-prs.1sg]({sc})| +{r} “I am milking the cows.” +{{< /gloss >}} -[^ex24]: Ibid., p. 64, ex. 3. - -(25) [^ex25] - -[^ex25]: Ibid., ex. 4. - -It is noteworthy that, unlike in the Nyimang examples above, the plural marking operated by the suffix *-(i)j* is redundant, since plurality is already marked by the subject pronoun *ter* “they” in (23) and the plural nominal suffix *-guu* in (25). In Nyimang, apart from rare instances of replacive patterns such as *wīd̪ɛ́ŋ* “child”/*dŕīŋ* “children," and a plural suffix *-gí/-ŋì* which can be attached to kinship terms, plurality in unmarked in nouns. This makes it necessary, either to mark it by determiners (“several,” “many”, etc.) or to encode it in the verb by a specific marker, as showed in (20b) and (21b) above. +It is noteworthy that, unlike in the Ama examples above, the plural marking operated by the suffix *-(i)j* is redundant, since plurality is already marked by the subject pronoun *ter* “they” in (23) and the plural nominal suffix *-guu* in (25). In Ama, apart from rare instances of replacive patterns such as *wīd̪ɛ́ŋ* “child”/*dŕīŋ* “children," and a plural suffix *-gí/-ŋì* which can be attached to kinship terms, plurality in unmarked in nouns. This makes it necessary, either to mark it by determiners (“several,” “many”, etc.) or to encode it in the verb by a specific marker, as showed in (20b) and (21b) above. Considering that the nominal plural suffixes that can be found in the NES languages are so diverse that no protoform can be reconstructed, it is plausible that Proto-NES had no plural nominal markers, but only a few replacive patterns and collective nouns with singulatives forms marked by a suffix *\*-tV*.[^x15] It was therefore necessary to mark the plurals of the participants in the verbal compound. Proto-Nubian seems to have been in this regard close to its ancestor Proto-NES.[^x16] Later on, for unknown reasons – but areal influence probably played a major role in it – each Nubian group worked out its own plural markers for all the nouns. This novelty of course competed with the earlier plural marking by verbal suffixes. However, both of them survived to this day, but they often follow economy principles. Khidir notes that “the *j*-suffix appears sporadically in the intransitive clause” and that “In the transitive clause […], when the object noun phrase is modified by a numeral or a quantifier such as *mallee* [many] or *minkellee* [how many], the plural marker on the object noun phrase becomes optional and subsequently the suffixation of *-j* becomes optional, too."[^x17] @@ -228,37 +324,60 @@ Considering that the nominal plural suffixes that can be found in the NES langua [^x16]: Ibid., 272. [^x17]: Khidir 2015: 64–65 -A third use of verbal plural markers in NES languages is to encode in ditransitive verbs the plurality of the indirect object, i.e., the beneficiary or recipient of the action. In this construction, the plural verbal suffix refers to the indirect object and not to the object in Old Nubian[^x50] and Nobiin[^32] and probably in Nyimang. For the latter language, I have unfortunately no clear example of this point in my limited fieldwork data, but an example provided by Norton illustrates this point for dual, which operates exactly like plural, but with the suffix *-ɛ̄n/-ēn* (the macron stands for middle tone here). +A third use of verbal plural markers in NES languages is to encode in ditransitive verbs the plurality of the indirect object, i.e., the beneficiary or recipient of the action. In this construction, the plural verbal suffix refers to the indirect object and not to the object in Old Nubian[^x50] and Nobiin[^32] and probably in Ama. For the latter language, I have unfortunately no clear example of this point in my limited fieldwork data, but an example provided by Norton illustrates this point for dual, which operates exactly like plural, but with the suffix *-ɛ̄n/-ēn* (the macron stands for middle tone here).[^x51] [^x50]: Van Gerven Oei, *A Reference Grammar of Old Nubian,* §13.1.3. [^32]: In Kordofan Nubian language Karko, unlike in Nobiin, the verbal number marker refers to the direct object even in ditransitive construction (Jakobi, “Verbal Number and Transitivity in Karko," pp. 164-165). The example she gives (“Dry the pots for the woman”), compared with the Nobiin example (28) above, shows that at least in this language, the participant hierarchy is not connected with the degree of animacy of the two objects, direct and indirect. See, however, n. 35 below. +[^x51]: Example from Norton, "Number in Ama Verbs," p. 86, ex. 35. -(26) àɪ̀ bā əm̄ōr-ì āmɪɛ̄r̄ tɛ̪ɡ̄-ɛn̄ɪ̀[^x51] +{{< gloss "(26)" >}} +{r} **Ama** +{g} *àɪ̀*,[1sg]({sc})|*bā*,[ver]({sc})|*əm̄ōr-ì*,friend-[dat]({sc})|*āmɪɛ̄r̄*,pen|*tɛ̪ɡ̄-ɛn̄ɪ̀*,give-[du]({sc})| +{r} “I gave a pen to two friends.” +{{< /gloss >}} -[^x51]: Norton, "Number in Ama Verbs," p. 86, ex. 35. +Here, the verbal number marker refers to the beneficiary (“friend”) and not to the object (“pen”), as it does in monotransitive constructions, although this beneficiary is already marked as a dative by the case ending *-ì.* The same feature is observed in Nobiin as shown in (27) and (28).[^ex27] -Here, the verbal number marker refers to the beneficiary (“friend”) and not to the object (“pen”), as it does in monotransitive constructions, although this beneficiary is already marked as a dative by the case ending *-ì.* The same feature is observed in Nobiin as shown in (27) and (28). +[^ex27]: Examples from Khalil, “The Verbal Plural Marker in Nobiin,” p. 64, exx. 6, 7. -(27) +{{< gloss "(27)" >}} +{r} **Nobiin** +{g} *ay*,[1sg]({sc})|*torbar-ka*,farmer-[acc]({sc})|*aŋŋaree-nci-ga*,bed-[pl-acc]({sc})|*kaay-a-tis*,make-*a*-[appl.prt1.1sg]({sc})| +{r} “I made the farmers a bed.” +{{< /gloss >}} -(28) +{{< gloss "(28)" >}} +{g} *ay*,[1sg]({sc})|*torbar-ii-ga*,farmer-[pl-acc]({sc})|*aŋŋaree-g*,bed-[acc]({sc})|*kaay-a-tic-c-is*,make-*a*-[appl-vnm-prt1.1sg]({sc})| +{r} “I made the farmers a bed.” +{{< /gloss >}} ### Plural Object Marking in Meroitic {#ii33} -The verbal number marking in these languages follows a syntactic hierarchy: it refers to the subject if there is no object, to the object if there is no beneficiary and to the beneficiary if there is one. This brings us back to Meroitic, in which the so-called “verbal dative” again has close parallels with the Nyimang and Nobiin verbal number marker. Unfortunately, no clear instance of *-x(e)/-bx(e)* can be found with intransitive verbs, mainly because none has been so far translated with certainty. Unlike Nyimang (20ab), Meroitic does not use a real verb “to be,” but a copula which is inflected for plural with a different suffix. Nonetheless, transitive and ditransitive constructions display the same hierarchy for the use of the verbal plural suffix as Nyimang and Nobiin. +The verbal number marking in these languages follows a syntactic hierarchy: it refers to the subject if there is no object, to the object if there is no beneficiary and to the beneficiary if there is one. This brings us back to Meroitic, in which the so-called “verbal dative” again has close parallels with the Ama and Nobiin verbal number marker. Unfortunately, no clear instance of *-x(e)/-bx(e)* can be found with intransitive verbs, mainly because none has been so far translated with certainty. Unlike Ama (20ab), Meroitic does not use a real verb “to be,” but a copula which is inflected for plural with a different suffix. Nonetheless, transitive and ditransitive constructions display the same hierarchy for the use of the verbal plural suffix as Ama and Nobiin. -Examples (29) and (30) are prayers to Amun, said by a fictive enunciator, in favour of king Amanakhareqerema (end of 1st c. CE). The first is engraved upon the base of ram statues from the entrance of the king’s temple in El-Hassa (REM 0001 and 1151[^x18]) and the second is a wall inscription from Temple 200 in Naga.[^x19] The long epithet of Amun, which is irrelevant to the present discussion, is omitted. Example (31) is one of the four columns of text engraved on the shaft of each of the sandstone columns in the Amun Temple in Naga (REM 0034A). Each of these inscriptions is a prayer to Amun, that he may give to the royal family the cardinal point it is facing (here “north”). The three members of the royal family are King Natakamani, Queen-Mother Amanitore, and Prince Arikakhataror. The epithet of Amun is again omitted here for convenience. +Examples (29) and (30) are prayers to Amun, said by a fictive enunciator, in favour of king Amanakhareqerema (end of 1st c. CE). The first is engraved upon the base of ram statues from the entrance of the king’s temple in El-Hassa (REM 0001 and 1151[^x18]) and the second is a wall inscription from Temple 200 in Naga.[^x19] The long epithet of Amun, which is irrelevant to the present discussion, is omitted. Example (31) is one of the four columns of text engraved on the shaft of each of the sandstone columns in the Amun Temple in Naga (REM 0034A).[^ex31] Each of these inscriptions is a prayer to Amun, that he may give to the royal family the cardinal point it is facing (here “north”). The three members of the royal family are King Natakamani, Queen-Mother Amanitore, and Prince Arikakhataror. The epithet of Amun is again omitted here for convenience. [^x18]: cf. Rilly, *Le méroïtique et sa famille linguistique,* p. 90. [^x19]: Rilly, “The Meroitic Inscriptions of Temple Naga 200.” +[^ex31]: Aritene and Makedeke/Makedoke, “the Great God,” are two of Amun-Re’s numerous hypostases. The name Aritene is obviously a nominal compound and is consequently followed by the article *-l,* though scribes frequently omitted it. This determiner is mandatory here because the name is a direct genitive (Rilly, *La langue du royaume de Méroé,* pp. 520-523). The meaning of Aritene is uncertain. It might be a Meroitic transcription *Ar-i-tene* of Egyptian *Harakhty* (Ḥr-ꜣḫt.y) “Horus of the Horizon,” where the “horizon” is reinterpreted as the “west”: cf. Meroitic *tene-ke-l* “west,” Nobiin *tin-o,* Ama *țêŋ* [CHECK] and words for “evening” or “night” in NES languages (Rilly, *Le méroïtique et sa famille linguistique,* p. 141). -(29) +{{< gloss "(29)" >}} +{r} **Meroitic** +{g} *Amni* (…),Amun|*Mnxreqerem*,Amanakhareqerema|*qore :*,ruler|*Mni*,Amun.[gen]({sc})|*tke-l :*,beloved-[det]({sc})|*pwrite :*,life|*l-x-te :*,give-[3sg.o-opt.2sg]({sc})| +{r} “O Amun (…), to Amanakhareqerema, ruler beloved of Amun, may you give life!” +{{< /gloss >}} -(30) +{{< gloss "(30)" >}} +{g} *Amni* (…),Amun|*Mnxreqerem*,Amanakhareqerema|*qore :*,ruler|*Mni*,Amun.[gen]({sc})|*tke-l :*,beloved-[det]({sc})|*pwrite :*,life|*ntke :*,strength|*kesekene*,also|*l-x-te :*,give-[3sg.o-opt.2sg]({sc})| +{r} “O Amun (…), to Amanakhareqerema, ruler beloved of Amun, may you give life and strength!” +{{< /gloss >}} -(31) +{{< gloss "(31)" >}} +{g} *Amni* (…),Amun|*Ntkmni*,Natakamani|*Amni*,Amun.[gen]({sc})|*mdese-l :*,descendant-[det]({sc})|*Mnitore*,Amanitore|*Aritene-l*,Aritene-[det.gen]({sc})|*mdese-l*,descendant-[det]({sc})|*Arkxtror*,Arikakhataror|*Mke-deke-l*,God-great-[det.gen]({sc})|*mdese-l :*,descendant-[det]({sc})|*hr-l :*,north-[det]({sc})|*alose :*,entirely|*l-bx*-∅-*te :*,give-[3pl.o-2sg-opt]({sc})| +{r} “O Amun (…), to Natakamani, the descendant of Amun, to Amanitore, the descendant of (the) Aritene, to Arakakhataror, the descendant of the Great God, may you give the north entirely!” +{{< /gloss >}} -In (29), the singular suffix *-x* is added to the stem *l-* “give”. It refers to a single beneficiary, king Amanakhareqerema. Admittedly, the object, namely *pwrite* “life, vital strength,” is also singular, so that evidence of the agreement with the beneficiary is to be sought in examples (30) and (31). In (30), the object is plural, *pwrite ntke* “life and strength,” since there is no dual in Meroitic. However, the suffix remains in the singular. In (31), the object is again singular, *hrl alose* "the north entirely," but the beneficiary is now a plural, namely the three members of the royal family. In this case, the plural form *-bx* of the suffix is used,[^34] just as we have seen in Nyimang and Nobiin. +In (29), the singular suffix *-x* is added to the stem *l-* “give”. It refers to a single beneficiary, king Amanakhareqerema. Admittedly, the object, namely *pwrite* “life, vital strength,” is also singular, so that evidence of the agreement with the beneficiary is to be sought in examples (30) and (31). In (30), the object is plural, *pwrite ntke* “life and strength,” since there is no dual in Meroitic. However, the suffix remains in the singular. In (31), the object is again singular, *hrl alose* "the north entirely," but the beneficiary is now a plural, namely the three members of the royal family. In this case, the plural form *-bx* of the suffix is used,[^34] just as we have seen in Ama and Nobiin. [^34]: Example (8) above, which is two centuries earlier than (29)–(31), is apparently a counterexample. Admittedly, the contextual elements are much clearer and the meaning of the verb is better established in examples (29)-(31) than in (8). However, it may be that the marking of the direct/indirect object is governed by the degree of animacy/definiteness, as it is in Old Nubian (Van Gerven Oei, *A Reference Grammar of Old Nubian,* §13.1.3). According to Dimmendaal, "Tama," p. 324, this hierarchy is the following: @@ -270,7 +389,7 @@ In (29), the singular suffix *-x* is added to the stem *l-* “give”. It refer ### The Verbal Plural Marker in NES Languages and in Meroitic {#ii34} -The Meroitic plural suffix *-bx(e)* shares three significant features with the verbal number markers in Nyimang and Nobiin: its direct adjunction to the stem within the verbal compound; its function as a plural marker of direct/indirect object; and its dependency on the hierarchy between participants of the action (cf. n. 34). Nonetheless, some important divergences can be observed. First of all, the Meroitic plural suffix is not a single morpheme like Nyimang *-(ī)d̪ì* and Nobiin *-(i)j* (where /i/ is a epenthetic vowel) but the plural form of a singular suffix *-x(e).* In languages where verbal number is an operative category, the most frequent situation contrasts unmarked singular and marked plural. Nonetheless, the growing literature on verbal number/pluractionality records some languages where there is an opposition between marked verbal singular and marked verbal plural. In her study of verbal number in Karko, a Kordofan Nubian language, Jakobi gives some instances of such verbs (**Table 1**). +The Meroitic plural suffix *-bx(e)* shares three significant features with the verbal number markers in Ama and Nobiin: its direct adjunction to the stem within the verbal compound; its function as a plural marker of direct/indirect object; and its dependency on the hierarchy between participants of the action (cf. n. 34 [CHECK]). Nonetheless, some important divergences can be observed. First of all, the Meroitic plural suffix is not a single morpheme like Ama *-(ī)d̪ì* and Nobiin *-(i)j* (where /i/ is a epenthetic vowel) but the plural form of a singular suffix *-x(e).* In languages where verbal number is an operative category, the most frequent situation contrasts unmarked singular and marked plural. Nonetheless, the growing literature on verbal number/pluractionality records some languages where there is an opposition between marked verbal singular and marked verbal plural. In her study of verbal number in Karko, a Kordofan Nubian language, Jakobi gives some instances of such verbs (**Table 1**). | Gloss | Sg. Object | Pl. Object | | :--- | :--- | :--- | @@ -282,15 +401,22 @@ The Meroitic plural suffix *-bx(e)* shares three significant features with the v **Table 1. Transitive verbs in Karko, singular stems marked by *-ɛɛr,* plural stems either unmarked or extended by *-Vk.*[^35]** -[^35]: Data from Jakobi, “Verbal Number and Transitivity in Karko," p. 126, t. 6. Only three of these verbs have specific markers both in singular and plural (“hang up,” “kindle,” “wake up”). In Karko, most of the verbs operate according to a pattern “unmarked singular/marked plural.” As in many languages where verbal number is present, the plural form can be a different verb (ibid., pp. 128-129). Several cases of replacive verbal forms for plural object marking are attested in Nyimang, see Norton, “Number in Ama Verbs,” p. 77. +[^35]: Data from Jakobi, “Verbal Number and Transitivity in Karko," p. 126, t. 6. Only three of these verbs have specific markers both in singular and plural (“hang up,” “kindle,” “wake up”). In Karko, most of the verbs operate according to a pattern “unmarked singular/marked plural.” As in many languages where verbal number is present, the plural form can be a different verb (ibid., pp. 128-129). Several cases of replacive verbal forms for plural object marking are attested in Ama, see Norton, “Number in Ama Verbs,” p. 77. In Maba, a language of Ouaddai (Eastern Chad) belonging to the Nilo-Saharan phylum, Weiss recorded instances of singular verbal suffix *-n* versus plural verbal suffix *-k.*[^36] -[^36]: Weiss, *Phonologie et morphosyntaxe du maba,* p. 270, ex. 699. +[^36]: Example from Weiss, *Phonologie et morphosyntaxe du maba,* p. 270, ex. 699. -(32a) +{{< gloss "(32a)" >}} +{r} **Maba** +{g} *ɛ́njìː*,water|*à-wáː*-***k***-*ì*,[1sg]({sc})-pour-[pl-decl]({sc})| +{r} “I pour out a lot of water, I pour out water regularly.” +{{< /gloss >}} -(32b) +{{< gloss "(32b)" >}} +{g} *ɛ́njìː*,water|*à-wáː*-***n***-*ì*,[1sg]({sc})-pour-[sg-decl]({sc})| +{r} “I pour out a bit of water.” +{{< /gloss >}} However, these examples are utterly different from the Meroitic verbal number system. In each case, the singular and the verbal suffixes are independent. In Meroitic, the plural marker *-b-x(e)* is morphologically the plural of the singular marker *-x(e),* which might be termed not the “dative” suffix, because it also encodes the direct object, but the “objective” verbal suffix. In Meroitic, as in the related language groups Nubian and Taman, the accusative and the dative nominal cases are merged in an “objective” case and marked by the same case-endings. @@ -300,11 +426,19 @@ The second discrepancy between the Meroitic plural suffix and “canonical” nu The Meroitic suffix *-bx(e)* is therefore located in the right place, but, contrary to its Nubian counterparts, its use, as much as we can judge in the limited corpus available, seems restricted to plural object marking and does not extend to the plurality of events. The following examples of frequentative forms are attested in Nobiin (33) and Karko (34).[^37] -[^37]: The original gloss plr “verbal plural stem” has been replaced by vnm “verbal number marker” in accordance with the conventions of the present article. +[^37]: Examples from Werner, *Grammatik des Nobiin,* p. 173; Jakobi,“Verbal Number and Transitivity in Karko," p. 130, ex. 16. The original gloss [plr]({sc}) “verbal plural stem” has been replaced by [vnm]({sc}) “verbal number marker” in accordance with the conventions of the present article. -(33) +{{< gloss "(33)" >}} +{r} **Nobiin** +{g} *ay*,[1sg]({sc})|*neer-j-ir*,sleep-[vnm-1sg]({sc})| +{r} “I sleep several times.” +{{< /gloss >}} -(34) +{{< gloss "(34)" >}} +{r} **Karko** +{g} *súk*,market.[loc]({sc})|*ʃɛ̀-ʈɛ̀g*,go.[vnm-frq.imp]({sc})| +{r} “Go [pl]({sc}) to the market frequently!” +{{< /gloss >}} It may, however, be mentioned that in Nubian languages, few instances of the use of the same morpheme for the frequentative (plurality of events) and the verbal number (plurality of participants) are attested. Nobiin and Old Nubian are the only Nubian languages where *-(i)j* is attested as both a plural event and participant marker, as shown in (33).[^x20] Still, it is uncertain whether this was also the case in Proto-Nubian. In (34) from Karko, the plurality of participants is indicated by the vowel *ɛ̀* in the verbal stem *ʃɛ̀-* (the singular stem is *ʃù-*), whereas the plurality of events is marked independently by the suffix *-tɛ̀g.* It may happen that a verb exhibits three different stems in Karko: one for a singular participant, one for a plural participant, and one for plurality of action.[^x21] A conspicuous instance is the verb “call,” which is *òg-* with singular object, *ògór* for plural object, and *òʃór* for plural action, i.e., a distributive meaning “call one by one." The suffix *-(V)ʃ* is a frequent number marker in Karko (Jakobi, “Verbal Number and Transitivity in Karko," 128) and other Kordofan Nubian languages, and is doubtlessly a reflex of Proto-Nubian suffix *\*-(i)j*. Another verbal number marker, the most frequent, is *-Vr,* with a vowel that is subject to vowel harmony. It is obvious that *òʃór* is an assimilated compound derived from *\*og-ʃ-Vr.* The two verbal plural suffixes *-(V)ʃ* and *-Vr* are used successively in the same stem to express plurality of object and plurality of events respectively. A similar distribution of these two verbal extensions is paralleled in Andaandi, where *-(i)j* is used for frequentatives, whereas the suffix *-ir* is used to mark the plurality of participants (only objects in this language).[^38] The markers *-(i)j* and *-ir* are clearly the Mattokki–Andaandi cognates of Kordofan Nubian *-(V)j* and *-Vr,* so that their use as specialized verbal plural markers might go back to Proto-Nubian. @@ -315,16 +449,28 @@ A distinct marker *-k* is found in Nubian for the plurality of events,[^x22] e.g [^x22]: Jakobi, “Verbal Number and Transitivity in Karko," p. 122 with further references. [^x23]: Thompson, "Nera," p. 491. -[^39]: The morphology of event plurality marking in Tama seems complex (Dimmendaal 2009: 316) and needs a specific study. In the closely related language Mararit, it seems reduplication, which is cross-linguistically a very common way to form verbal plurals, is used (Elnazir Mustafa 2016: 55). In Nyimang, the same suffix *-īd̪ì* (see exx. 21-22) is used for plurality of participants and plurality of events. -[^40]: Several cases of “fossilised” suffix *-k* are attested in Meroitic, in which basic verb has disappeared whereas the form with *-k* has been preserved, but has lost its pluractional meaning. Examples are the verbs *erik-* “beget” and probably *tk-* “love” or “revere” in *Amni-tke-l* “beloved of Amun” (Rilly, *Le méroïtique et sa famille linguistique,* pp. 90-91). The former verb is still attested in Ajang (Kordofan Nubian) in both its forms: *ír-í* “give birth,” pluractional *ír-k-í* “give birth to one child after the other” (Jakobi, *Kordofan Nubian,* p. 114). The second might be an assimilated form /takk/- of *\*tar-k-*, cf. Old Nubian ⲧⲁⲣⲟⲩ-, ⲧⲁⲣⲓ- “praise, bless,” Tama *tár-* “love.” +[^39]: The morphology of event plurality marking in Tama seems complex (Dimmendaal 2009: 316) and needs a specific study. In the closely related language Mararit, it seems reduplication, which is cross-linguistically a very common way to form verbal plurals, is used (Elnazir Mustafa 2016: 55). In Ama, the same suffix *-īd̪ì* (see exx. 21-22) is used for plurality of participants and plurality of events. +[^40]: Several cases of “fossilized” suffix *-k* are attested in Meroitic, in which basic verb has disappeared whereas the form with *-k* has been preserved, but has lost its pluractional meaning. Examples are the verbs *erik-* “beget” and probably *tk-* “love” or “revere” in *Amni-tke-l* “beloved of Amun” (Rilly, *Le méroïtique et sa famille linguistique,* pp. 90-91). The former verb is still attested in Ajang (Kordofan Nubian) in both its forms: *ír-í* “give birth,” pluractional *ír-k-í* “give birth to one child after the other” (Jakobi, *Kordofan Nubian,* p. 114). The second might be an assimilated form /takk/- of *\*tar-k-*, cf. Old Nubian ⲧⲁⲣⲟⲩ-, ⲧⲁⲣⲓ- “praise, bless,” Tama *tár-* “love.” -(35) +{{< gloss "(35)" >}} +{r} **Meroitic** +{g} *abr-se-l :*,man-each-[det]({sc})|*e-ked :*,[1sg.s]({sc})-kill|*kdi-se-l :*,woman-each-[det]({sc})|*e-(e)r-k :*,[1sg.s]({sc})-take-[plc]({sc})| +{r} “I killed each man; I (repeatedly) took each woman." (REM 1044/4–5) +{{< /gloss >}} -Although it encodes the plurality of events, it seems that this suffix cannot be used in combination with the plural object marker *-bx(e),* unlike the verbal form *òʃór* in Karko, where the plural event suffix is combined with the plural object suffix. Examples (36) and (37) are drawn from Queen Amanirenas and Prince Akinidad’s stela REM 1003 and describe military campaigns against two different tribes in nearly identical terms. The first uses the pluractional suffix *-k,* but no plural object marker is present, probably because the distributive value of *tk-k* “seize one by one” implies the plurality of the object. Conversely, in the second sentence, the verbal plural marker *-bx* is present, but not the pluractional suffix *-k.* +Although it encodes the plurality of events, it seems that this suffix cannot be used in combination with the plural object marker *-bx(e),* unlike the verbal form *òʃór* in Karko, where the plural event suffix is combined with the plural object suffix. Examples (36) and (37) are drawn from Queen Amanirenas and Prince Akinidad’s stela REM 1003 and describe military campaigns against two different tribes in nearly identical terms. The first uses the pluractional suffix *-k,* but no plural object marker is present, probably because the distributive value of *tk-k* “seize one by one” implies the plurality of the object. Conversely, in the second sentence, the verbal plural marker *-bx* is present, but not the pluractional suffix *-k.*[^ex36] -(36) +[^ex36]: In (36), “their” refers to the women and the men, who are quoted in the previous sentence. One may wonder whether the term *apote,* which is borrowed from Egyptian *wpwtj,* “envoy, ambassador,” does not mean something like “tribal chief” in this particular context. -(37) +{{< gloss "(36)" >}} +{g} *abr :*,man|*100 :*,100|*kdi*,woman|*1*[.]*2* :,1[.]2|*qo-leb :*,this-[det.pl]({sc})|*apote*,envoy|*be-se :*,[3pl-gen]({sc})|*tk-k :*,seize-[plc]({sc})| +{r} “(I) seized 100 men, 1[.]2 women (and) their envoy.” (REM 1003/10) +{{< /gloss >}} + +{{< gloss "(37)" >}} +{g} *abr :*,man|*58 :*,58|*kdi*,woman|*223* :,223|*qo-leb :*,this-[det.pl]({sc})|*apote*,envoy|*qebe-se :*,[3pl-gen]({sc})|*ye-tk-bx-i :*,[1sg.s]({sc})-seize-[3pl.o-tam]({sc})| +{r} “I seized 58 men, 223 women (and) their envoy.” (REM 1003/12–13) +{{< /gloss >}} The difference between Meroitic, where the pleonastic use of the two plurality markers is avoided and Karko, where it is allowed, shows how verbal number marking can vary within the same language family. This flexibility may be due to the rivalry between these markers and other ways to express plurality, according to Gerrit Dimmendaal: @@ -334,11 +480,11 @@ The difference between Meroitic, where the pleonastic use of the two plurality m ### A New Hypothesis Concerning the Origin of *-bx(e)* {#ii36} -The plural object marker *-bx(e)* displays an astonishing feature, which has yet to be noted. One may expect that the plural of *-x(e)* to be *\*-x(e)b,* with a suffixed plural marker *-b,* as is the cases with other morphemes. The plural of the article *-l* is *-leb* and the possessive *qe-se* “his/her” (lit. “of him/her”) becomes *qe-be-se* “their” (lit. “of them”) when the possessor is in the plural (see [§3.2](#ii2)). The unexpected initial location of the plural marker in the compound *-b-x(e)* is best explained by supposing that the plural morpheme *-b* was the basic element of this group. The object marker *-x(e)* was later added to it, and not the opposite. In this case, we can surmise that, originally, the verbal plural marker was simply *-b.* As is obvious from comparative pairs such as Proto-Nubian *\*nogu* ~ Meroitic *nob* /nuba/ “slave”; Proto-Nubian *\*aŋgur* ~ Meroitic *abore* /abur/ “elephant,” the Meroitic reflex of Proto-NES *\*g* followed or preceded by a labiovelar vowel is /b/.[^x25] The original verbal plural marker was therefore *\*gu.* In Old Nubian and Nobiin, this element is preserved as a nominal and pronominal plural marker: ⲙⲁⲛ /man/ “that,” ⲙⲁⲛⲛ̄-ⲅⲟⲩ /manin-gu/ “those.” +The plural object marker *-bx(e)* displays an astonishing feature, which has yet to be noted. One may expect that the plural of *-x(e)* to be *\*-x(e)b,* with a suffixed plural marker *-b,* as is the cases with other morphemes. The plural of the article *-l* is *-leb* and the possessive *qe-se* “his/her” (lit. “of him/her”) becomes *qe-be-se* “their” (lit. “of them”) when the possessor is in the plural (see [3.2](#ii2)). The unexpected initial location of the plural marker in the compound *-b-x(e)* is best explained by supposing that the plural morpheme *-b* was the basic element of this group. The object marker *-x(e)* was later added to it, and not the opposite. In this case, we can surmise that, originally, the verbal plural marker was simply *-b.* As is obvious from comparative pairs such as Proto-Nubian *\*nogu* ~ Meroitic *nob* /nuba/ “slave”; Proto-Nubian *\*aŋgur* ~ Meroitic *abore* /abur/ “elephant,” the Meroitic reflex of Proto-NES *\*g* followed or preceded by a labiovelar vowel is /b/.[^x25] The original verbal plural marker was therefore *\*gu.* In Old Nubian and Nobiin, this element is preserved as a nominal and pronominal plural marker: ⲙⲁⲛ /man/ “that,” ⲙⲁⲛⲛ̄-ⲅⲟⲩ /manin-gu/ “those.” [^x25]: Rilly, *Le méroïtique et sa famille linguistique,* p. 373. -It is nevertheless unclear whether the Old Nubian and Nobiin verbal plural marker *-(i)j* (see [§3.3.2](#ii32)) is a cognate of *\*gu.* The Proto-Nubian phoneme *\*ɟ* cannot be reconstructed in Proto-NES, but principally derived from *\*g,* when followed or preceded by the palatal vowels *\*i* and *\*e*.[^x26] The Nubian verbal plural marker might accordingly result from a protoform *\*-ig.* Similarly, its Nyimang counterpart *-(ī)d̪ì* probably derived from *\*(-i)gi.* The Nyimang dental stops *t̪* and *d̪* are the regular reflexes of Proto-NES *\*k* and *\*g* with back vowels,[^x27] but there are some instances of the same development with palatal vowels, such as *kwɔ̀dŕ* “strong” ← Proto-NES *\*kugir*[^x280] or *tɛd̪i-ŋ* “under” ← Proto-NES *\*tago-* “belly.”[^x28] To sum it up, the Meroitic suffix derives from *\*gu,* whereas the Nyimang and Nubian suffixes derive from *\*(i-)gi.* Because Nyimang and Nubian belong to two separate groups within the NES languages, it is plausible that *\*(i-)gi* is the Proto-NES etymon, whereas *\*gu* is a secondary protoform restricted to the eastern branch of NES (Nubian/Meroitic and Nara). +It is nevertheless unclear whether the Old Nubian and Nobiin verbal plural marker *-(i)j* (see [3.3.2](#ii32)) is a cognate of *\*gu.* The Proto-Nubian phoneme *\*ɟ* cannot be reconstructed in Proto-NES, but principally derived from *\*g,* when followed or preceded by the palatal vowels *\*i* and *\*e*.[^x26] The Nubian verbal plural marker might accordingly result from a protoform *\*-ig.* Similarly, its Ama counterpart *-(ī)d̪ì* probably derived from *\*(-i)gi.* The Ama dental stops *t̪* and *d̪* are the regular reflexes of Proto-NES *\*k* and *\*g* with back vowels,[^x27] but there are some instances of the same development with palatal vowels, such as *kwɔ̀dŕ* “strong” ← Proto-NES *\*kugir*[^x280] or *tɛd̪i-ŋ* “under” ← Proto-NES *\*tago-* “belly.”[^x28] To sum it up, the Meroitic suffix derives from *\*gu,* whereas the Ama and Nubian suffixes derive from *\*(i-)gi.* Because Ama and Nubian belong to two separate groups within the NES languages, it is plausible that *\*(i-)gi* is the Proto-NES etymon, whereas *\*gu* is a secondary protoform restricted to the eastern branch of NES (Nubian/Meroitic and Nara). [^x26]: Ibid., pp. 303-304. [^x27]: Ibid., p. 329, n. 4. @@ -347,28 +493,44 @@ It is nevertheless unclear whether the Old Nubian and Nobiin verbal plural marke Like *-(i)j* in Old Nubian and Nobiin, the verbal plural marker *-b* was once used for plurality of events or plurality of object. The name of the Napatan king Amaninatakilebte,[^42] who ruled during the second half of the 6th century BCE, does not make sense if the suffix *-b* marks the plurality of object. It would mean “Amun, give them strength,” with no clue as to who these multiple beneficiaries could be. Actually, the suffix marked the plurality of events and emphasised the repetition of the gift: “give again and again,” “give continuously,” or “keep giving”.[^43] +[^42]: For this ruler, see *FHN* II, pp.293–296. The name is known in Egyptian transcription only (first line of (38)), since the Meroitic script was invented only three centuries later. [^43]: In the inscriptions of the temple of Apedemak in Naga, the verbal form *lbxte* “give them” is attested in REM 0003, where the beneficiary is the sole queen and in REM 0004, where it is the king alone. In her publication of these texts, Karola Zibelius explains this plural form as an iterative.[^x29] However, at this time (mid-1st c. CE), the verbal plural suffix *-bx* was already specialized to exclusively mark the object plurality. It never occurs in benedictions involving a single person, where only *lxte* is used at least since the 2nd c. BCE (REM 1044A, REM 1151). The plural marker in REM 0003 and 0004 refers to the three members of the royal family, who constitute an indissoluble trinity, even when the queen and the king are figured alone (cf. ex. 31 above). [^x29]: Zibelius 1983: 45-52. -(38) +{{< gloss "(38)" >}} +{g} **Egyptian transcription**,**Meroitic (reconstituted)**,**Gloss**|*Jmn-*,*Amni-*,Amun|*ntk-*,*ntki-*,strength|*lbt*,*l-b-te*,give-[vnm-opt.2sg]({sc})| +{r} “Amun, may you keep giving strength!” +{{< /gloss >}} -At first sight, the addition of the object marker *-x(e)* to the plural suffix *-b,* i.e., the suffixation to a suffix, makes no sense grammatically. This would be only possible if this suffix, at a moment in the history of the Meroitic language, was interpreted as a pronoun. The following example from the Old Nubian legend of Saint Mina can illustrate how this transcategorization of the verbal plural marker occurred. +At first sight, the addition of the object marker *-x(e)* to the verbal plural suffix *-b,* i.e., the suffixation to a suffix, makes no sense grammatically. This would be only possible if this suffix, at a moment in the history of the Meroitic language, was interpreted as a pronoun. The following example from the Old Nubian legend of Saint Mina can illustrate how this transcategorization of the verbal plural marker occurred.[^x56] -(39) [correct ON example] [^x56] +{{< gloss "(39)" >}} +{r} **Old Nubian** +{r} ⳟⲥ̄ⲥⲟⲩ ⲙⲏⲛⲁ-ⲛ ⲕⲥ̄ⲥⲉⲗⲁ ⲧ̄ⳝⳝⲁⲛⲁⲥⲁ +{g} *ŋissou*,holy|*mēna-n*,Mina-[gen]({sc})|*kisse-la*,church-[dat]({sc})|*tij-j-ana-sa*,give>2/3-[o.pl-imp.2/3pl-purp]({sc})| +{r} “So that we give it to them in the church of Saint Mina." (M 9.3–4) +{{< /gloss >}} In his analysis of the text, Van Gerven Oei notes that the “plural object marker -ⳝ [is] referring to the recipients of the egg, which remain unexpressed.”[^x55] Nevertheless, even if the plural object marker is not *stricto sensu* a pronoun, it operates in this sentence as an anaphoric element and is accordingly translated “to them” by the editor of the text. It is probably via a similar process that its Meroitic counterpart *-b* became a 3rd person plural enclitic pronoun. This explains the strange location of this morpheme, which is directly appended to the stem, before the TAM suffixes. -[^x56] Van Gerven Oei, p.c. -[^x55] Van Gerven Oei \& El-Guzuuli, *The Miracle of Saint Mina,* p. 99. +[^x56]: Example from Van Gerven Oei, *A Reference Grammar of Old Nubian,* §8.3.2.2. +[^x55]: Van Gerven Oei \& El-Guzuuli, *The Miracle of Saint Mina,* p. 99. He later refers to the same suffix as "pluractional" (Van Gerven Oei, *A Reference Grammar of Old Nubian,* §13.1.) Once it was considered to be a pronominal marker, *-b* was inflected by the objective case ending. This morpheme is attested after noun phrases in two variants; *-xe* (40) and *-w* (41). -(40) +{{< gloss "(40)" >}} +{r} **Meroitic** +{g} *atepoke :*,offering(?)|*dot-l*-***xe***,large(?)-[det-obj1]({sc})|*pisi-tk-bxe-kese* (← *-kete-se*),[caus]({sc})-offer-[3pl.o-opt.2pl.impp]({sc})| +{r} “May you [pl]({sc}) present them with a large(?) offering(?)" (REM 1063) +{{< /gloss >}} -(41) +{{< gloss "(41)" >}} +{g} *x(re)*,food|*mlo-l*-***w***,good-[det-obj2]({sc})|*hol-kete*,serve-[opt.2pl]({sc})| +{r} “May you [pl]({sc}) serve him a good meal” (REM 0059) +{{< /gloss >}} -The difference between the two suffixes is unclear. The previous examples are drawn from benediction formulae used at the end of the funerary texts, formula J in (40) and formula C’ in (41).[^45] They can co-occur in the same text.[^46] The Proto-NES ending for the objective case can be reconstructed as *\*-gV,*[^47] which is preserved in Nubian and vestigially in Nara. In the Taman language group and in Nyimang, the vowel *V* was dropped and the final *\*-g* became *-ŋ.* We have seen in [§3](#i) that the value of the grapheme *-x* in local words was most likely /ŋ/. The following *e* probably had a zero value, so that *-xe* was simply a final /ŋ/ like the Taman and Nyimang marker. +The difference between the two suffixes is unclear. The previous examples are drawn from benediction formulae used at the end of the funerary texts, formula J in (40) and formula C’ in (41).[^45] They can co-occur in the same text.[^46] The Proto-NES ending for the objective case can be reconstructed as *\*-gV,*[^47] which is preserved in Nubian and vestigially in Nara. In the Taman language group and in Ama, the vowel *V* was dropped and the final *\*-g* became *-ŋ.* We have seen in [3](#i) that the value of the grapheme *-x* in local words was most likely /ŋ/. The following *e* probably had a zero value, so that *-xe* was simply a final /ŋ/ like the Taman and Ama marker. [^45]: See Rilly, *La langue du Royaume de Méroé,* pp. 171-172 (formula C’) and pp. 176-177 (formula J). [^46]: The two suffixes are therefore used at the same period, but a dialectal difference is possible, since the Meroitic scribes had a marked taste for variety and commonly used dialectal variants in the same text (cf. Rilly, *La langue du Royaume de Méroé,* p. 42). @@ -381,11 +543,17 @@ This “objective case” in Nubian and in Tama undergoes some restrictions gove Similarly, the objective case ending may be omitted, as can be seen in the second of two consecutive sentences from King Taneyidamani’s stela. In (43), the expected verbal compound, parallel to the singular form *ekedeto* in (42), should be *ekedbxto.* However, maybe because of the presence of the object pronoun *qoleb,* the objective case ending *-x* is absent. -(42) +{{< gloss "(42)" >}} +{g} *Nhror*,Nakharura|*wide-l :*,brother-[det]({sc})|*e-ked-e-to :*,[1sg.s]({sc})-kill-[tam]({sc})| +{r} “I killed the brother, Nakharura” (REM 1044/143–144) +{{< /gloss >}} -(43) +{{< gloss "(43)" >}} +{g} *qoleb :*,[3pl]({sc})|*axro*,?|*tewideb-wit*,?|*e-ked-b-to*,[1sg.s]({sc})-kill-[vnm-tam]({sc})| +{r} “I killed them, ???” (REM 1044/148-150) +{{< /gloss >}} -In conclusion, the suffixes *-x(e)* and *-bx(e)* operate in the verbal compound as an enclitic object pronoun. It originally consisted of a verbal plural marker *-b,* similar to its counterparts in Nubian and Nyimang. Between the 6th and the 2nd century BC, this suffix underwent a transcategorization and became an enclitic object pronoun inflected with the objective case ending *-x(e).* In parallel, a 3rd person singular counter­part, *-x(e),* without the plural marker *-b,* was created. +In conclusion, the suffixes *-x(e)* and *-bx(e)* operate in the verbal compound as an enclitic object pronoun. It originally consisted of a verbal plural marker *-b,* similar to its counterparts in Nubian and Ama. Between the 6th and the 2nd century BCE, this suffix underwent a transcategorization and became an enclitic object pronoun inflected with the objective case ending *-x(e).* In parallel, a 3rd person singular counter­part, *-x(e),* without the plural marker *-b,* was created. # The First Person Singular Marker {#iii} @@ -404,11 +572,23 @@ In the mid-5th c. BCE, a dramatic shift occurred. The inscriptions of the late N [^52]: Cf. *FHN* II: 487 (l. 46), 488 (l. 50), 489 (l. 52), 490 (l. 54, 56), 491 (l. 60), 492 (l. 64). -In Harsiotef’s stela, after the titles and the eulogy, where the king is referred to in the third person, the text abruptly shifts to the first person, without any kind of transition (*FHN* II: 441, l. 4). In Nastasen’s stela, the main text similarly begins with the titles of the king and a long eulogy, after which the narrative is introduced by the clause *dd=f* “he says,” referring, of course, to the king. This addition, lacking in Harsiotef’s stela, makes clear that, from this point on, the narrator is the ruler.[^53] The following passage from Nastasen’s chronicle (ll. 54–56) illustrates this novel use of the first person in Napatan war reports. Conspicuously, the monarch is not acting in person, but through his warriors, hence the use of the factitive verb *dj* “make, cause to.” +In Harsiotef’s stela, after the titles and the eulogy, where the king is referred to in the third person, the text abruptly shifts to the first person, without any kind of transition (*FHN* II: 441, l. 4). In Nastasen’s stela, the main text similarly begins with the titles of the king and a long eulogy, after which the narrative is introduced by the clause *dd=f* “he says,” referring, of course, to the king. This addition, lacking in Harsiotef’s stela, makes clear that, from this point on, the narrator is the ruler.[^53] The following passage from Nastasen’s chronicle (ll. 54–56) illustrates this novel use of the first person in Napatan war reports.[^54] Conspicuously, the monarch is not acting in person, but through his warriors, hence the use of the factitive verb *dj* “make, cause to.” [^53]: *FHN* II: 475 (l. 4). This infringement of the Egyptian tradition puzzled the editor of the text, who appropriately translated “he says,” but erroneously corrected in n. 151: “For ‘I say’.” -(44) [^54] +{{< gloss "(44)" >}} +{r} **Egyptian** +{r} *k.t ꜥn* +{r}"And another thing again. +{r}*dj=ı͗ sj=f pd.t ḥr sby.t Mḫ Šrḫrtj* +{r}I had a battalion of archers to go against the enemy tribe of the Makho of Sharakharti. +{r}*dj=j ḫꜣy ꜥꜣ* +{r}I caused a great bloodbath. +{r}*dj=j ṯꜣ pꜣ wr pꜣ nty jw=f r s.ꜥnḫ jr.t n-jm=f nb ḥmt nb.t* +{r}I had the chief seized, (together with) all that on which he would feed, and all the women. +{r}*dj=j* <*s*>*w ẖr=j x*[*ꜥ*]*q jwꜣ 203,146 mnmn 33,050* +{r}I put in my possession a booty (of) 203,146 oxen and 33,050 head of livestock.” +{{< /gloss >}} [^54]: Reading and translation by the author. See *FHN* II: 490 and Peust, *Das Napatanische,* pp. 42, 60, 64. @@ -466,13 +646,13 @@ Note that only the passages where at least the verb *ked* is present are taken i **Table 2. Forms of the verbs "kill" and "seize" (*vel. sim*) in REM 1044, 0092, 1003, 1333, and 0094.** -The verbal forms listed above show a great diversity of suffixes. The plural verbal marker *-bx(e)* in REM 1333, variant *-b* in REM 1044/149-150 and 0094, and the pluractional suffix *-k* in REM 1044/5 and 1003, which were studied both in [§3.3.6](#ii36), are irrelevant in the quest for personal markers. The suffixes *-td* (only in REM 1044), *-to* in REM 1044 and 0092, *-te* in REM 0094 are probably tense or aspect markers, which are in final position in all the other NES languages.[^61] The morpheme *-i* in REM 1003 is obviously optional, as it can be present or absent in identical sequences such as *abr-se-l: ye-ked-i* “I killed each man” in l. 4 vs. *abr-se-l ye-ked* in l. 11.[^62] The vocalic sign *-e* appended to the stem in *(e)-ked-e-to* (REM 1044 and 0092) is probably an epenthetic vowel inserted before the suffix *-to.* In the other verbal forms ending with this suffix that occur in the same texts, the vowel *-e* is generally absent, but no obvious rule, as for now, can predict its appearance. Finally, the forms ending with *-l-o* in REM 1333 are very probably periphrastic, as they include participles followed by the article *-l* and the copula *-o.* The multiplicity of tense or aspect markers that occur in these narrative texts is by no means unexpected or dubious, but is a further aspect of the *varietas* that is so peculiar to the Meroitic texts, when compared with their formulaic Egyptian counterparts.[^63] A similar variety in narrative tenses can be found in many languages. In French, for example, historical records can of course use simple past and imperfect, but present is possible (*présent de narration*) and even future, in this case referring to past events (*futur historique*). +The verbal forms listed above show a great diversity of suffixes. The plural verbal marker *-bx(e)* in REM 1333, variant *-b* in REM 1044/149-150 and 0094, and the pluractional suffix *-k* in REM 1044/5 and 1003, which were studied both in [3.3.6](#ii36), are irrelevant in the quest for personal markers. The suffixes *-td* (only in REM 1044), *-to* in REM 1044 and 0092, *-te* in REM 0094 are probably tense or aspect markers, which are in final position in all the other NES languages.[^61] The morpheme *-i* in REM 1003 is obviously optional, as it can be present or absent in identical sequences such as *abr-se-l: ye-ked-i* “I killed each man” in l. 4 vs. *abr-se-l ye-ked* in l. 11.[^62] The vocalic sign *-e* appended to the stem in *(e)-ked-e-to* (REM 1044 and 0092) is probably an epenthetic vowel inserted before the suffix *-to.* In the other verbal forms ending with this suffix that occur in the same texts, the vowel *-e* is generally absent, but no obvious rule, as for now, can predict its appearance. Finally, the forms ending with *-l-o* in REM 1333 are very probably periphrastic, as they include participles followed by the article *-l* and the copula *-o.* The multiplicity of tense or aspect markers that occur in these narrative texts is by no means unexpected or dubious, but is a further aspect of the *varietas* that is so peculiar to the Meroitic texts, when compared with their formulaic Egyptian counterparts.[^63] A similar variety in narrative tenses can be found in many languages. In French, for example, historical records can of course use simple past and imperfect, but present is possible (*présent de narration*) and even future, in this case referring to past events (*futur historique*). -[^61]: Wolfgang Schenkel, in his analysis of the verbal affixes in the Meroitic royal text ("Meroitisches und Barya-Verb"), assumes that *-td* is a durative suffix, which he compares with the durative ending *-ter/-der* in Nara. Note that this suffix is attested only in Reinisch’s description of the language, which used second-hand material and is not entirely reliable (Reinisch, *Die Barea-Sprache,* 57). Schenkel suggests that the suffix *-to* includes an aorist marker *-t* followed by a 1st person singular *-o,* with similar comparisons with Nara. For a critical review of his hypotheses, see Hofmann, *Material für eine meroitische Grammatik,* 214-216. Note that the suffix *-te* in REM 0094 (also frequent with other verbs in REM 1003) is not identical with the 2nd person plural suffix of the optative, which is also written *-te* (see [§5.2](#iv2) below). +[^61]: Wolfgang Schenkel, in his analysis of the verbal affixes in the Meroitic royal text ("Meroitisches und Barya-Verb"), assumes that *-td* is a durative suffix, which he compares with the durative ending *-ter/-der* in Nara. Note that this suffix is attested only in Reinisch’s description of the language, which used second-hand material and is not entirely reliable (Reinisch, *Die Barea-Sprache,* 57). Schenkel suggests that the suffix *-to* includes an aorist marker *-t* followed by a 1st person singular *-o,* with similar comparisons with Nara. For a critical review of his hypotheses, see Hofmann, *Material für eine meroitische Grammatik,* 214-216. Note that the suffix *-te* in REM 0094 (also frequent with other verbs in REM 1003) is not identical with the 2nd person plural suffix of the optative, which is also written *-te* (see [5.2](#iv2) below). [^62]: This morpheme may be the same as the particle *-wi* that is added *ad libitum* to the singular copula *-o* (cf. Rilly, *Le méroïtique et sa famille linguistique,* p. 186). The consonant *w-* could be either an epenthetic glide inserted between *o* (pronounced /u/) and *i,* or a dummy sign used to write the hiatus /u/ + /i/ according to the rules of the alphasyllabic Meroitic writing system (Rilly, *La langue du Royaume de Méroé,* pp. 294-295). [^63]: This is particularly true for the funerary texts. See Rilly, *La langue du Royaume de Méroé,* pp. 202, 565. -Coming back to **Table 2**, the only marker that can actually refer to the person is the prefix *(y)e-,* since it has no alternative, unlike the diverse suffixes that are listed above. As explained in [§3](#i), the form *ye-* is just a later spelling of *e-.* Both were similarly pronounced /e/. In early inscriptions such as Taneyidamani’s stela (REM 1044), the prefix is spelled *e-* everywhere. In classical Meroitic texts such as Akinidad’s stela (REM 1003),*e-* (in *erk*) and *ye-* (in *yerki*) are alternately used for the same verb. Finally, in the late stela of viceroy Abratoye (REM 1333), the only spelling is *ye-.* One may wonder why this personal marker was not identified earlier. Actually, there were two difficulties. First, the prefix is missing in several clauses in REM 1003 and is completely absent in REM 0092 and 0094; second, a prefix *ye-* is attested in the final benedictions of the funerary texts, in a context where only the 2nd person plural is expected. +Coming back to **Table 2**, the only marker that can actually refer to the person is the prefix *(y)e-,* since it has no alternative, unlike the diverse suffixes that are listed above. As explained in [3](#i), the form *ye-* is just a later spelling of *e-.* Both were similarly pronounced /e/. In early inscriptions such as Taneyidamani’s stela (REM 1044), the prefix is spelled *e-* everywhere. In classical Meroitic texts such as Akinidad’s stela (REM 1003),*e-* (in *erk*) and *ye-* (in *yerki*) are alternately used for the same verb. Finally, in the late stela of viceroy Abratoye (REM 1333), the only spelling is *ye-.* One may wonder why this personal marker was not identified earlier. Actually, there were two difficulties. First, the prefix is missing in several clauses in REM 1003 and is completely absent in REM 0092 and 0094; second, a prefix *ye-* is attested in the final benedictions of the funerary texts, in a context where only the 2nd person plural is expected. ## The Distribution of the Prefix *(y)e-* and Homonymy {#iii3} @@ -484,14 +664,14 @@ How can we account for these variations in the distribution of the prefix *(y)e- It seems that, in the course of time, the personal marker *(y)e-* shifted from compulsory verbal affix to quasi-independent subject pronoun. On the one hand, it could be present or absent if implicit, just like personal pronouns in English. On the other hand, it was never separated from the verb by an intermediary element such as an object noun group or an adverbial phrase. Its close connection with the following verbal form is also showed by the total absence of a word-divider *:* between them in all the texts. In addition, ellipsis was likely more frequent in everyday speech than in the literary inscription. This could explain the difference in the use of the prefix between the contemporaneous texts REM 0092 and 1003: REM 0092 is a simple graffito carelessly engraved in the temple of Dakka during the visit of prince Akinidad, whereas REM 1003 was an official stela erected at the entrance of the temple of Amun in Hamadab. -The second difficulty is that a homonymous prefix *ye-* is attested in verbal compounds of the funerary benedictions, which are clearly in the 2nd person plural since these passages are prayers to Isis and Osiris. This rare alternative prefix can replace the element *p(V)s(V)-* that is generally found at the beginning of the complex verbal forms of the benedictions A and B.[^65] It is altogether the most frequent in the rare benediction D.[^66] The suffixes of the verbal compounds of the benedictions are now relatively well understood (see [§5.1](#iv1)), though their prefixes still remain puzzling. Both *ye-* and *p(V)s(V)-* can best be interpreted as causative markers, as they always appear before the verbal stems meaning “drink” (*he* in benediction A) and “eat” (*xr* in benediction B), but are optional before the verb “offer, present” (*hol* in benediction C). The deities invoked in the funerary texts would be invited to “make” the deceased “drink” and “eat,” but they could either “present them with a good meal” or “have them presented with a good meal.” Prefixes are extremely rare in NES languages and only the Taman group has verbal prefixes, used exclusively for marking the person (a point to which we return below). +The second difficulty is that a homonymous prefix *ye-* is attested in verbal compounds of the funerary benedictions, which are clearly in the 2nd person plural since these passages are prayers to Isis and Osiris. This rare alternative prefix can replace the element *p(V)s(V)-* that is generally found at the beginning of the complex verbal forms of the benedictions A and B.[^65] It is altogether the most frequent in the rare benediction D.[^66] The suffixes of the verbal compounds of the benedictions are now relatively well understood (see [5.1](#iv1)), though their prefixes still remain puzzling. Both *ye-* and *p(V)s(V)-* can best be interpreted as causative markers, as they always appear before the verbal stems meaning “drink” (*he* in benediction A) and “eat” (*xr* in benediction B), but are optional before the verb “offer, present” (*hol* in benediction C). The deities invoked in the funerary texts would be invited to “make” the deceased “drink” and “eat,” but they could either “present them with a good meal” or “have them presented with a good meal.” Prefixes are extremely rare in NES languages and only the Taman group has verbal prefixes, used exclusively for marking the person (a point to which we return below). [^65]: See Rilly, *La langue du Royaume de Méroé,* pp. 559-567. It accounts for 2% of the verbal forms used in the benedictions funerary texts according to Schenkel, “Zur Struktur des Verbalkomplexes in den Schlußformel der meroitischen Totentexte,” p. 8. [^66]: Rilly, *La langue du Royaume de Méroé,* pp. 172-174. Only 20 occurrences are known so far. The most plausible solution would be to regard *ye-* and *p(V)s(V)-* as causative verbs, such as “make” or “have” in English. In the case of *p(V)s(V)-,* a possible cognate could be Old Nubian ⲡⲉⲥ- “tell, speak, say.” The gods of the underworld could in this case could be invited, literally, to “tell” that the deceased eat and drink, that is, to make them eat and drink. As for the alternative verb *ye-* in these passages, it could be linked with Old Nubian ⲉⲓ- and Nobiin *ií-* “say,” especially because *ye-* has a variant *yi-* which is three times more frequent in funerary texts.[^67] This solution may be semantically acceptable, but it faces a major obstacle: Meroitic, like all the NES languages, is a head-final language, in which the verb is placed at the end of sentences and the auxiliary is expected to occur after the verb. In addition, the absence of TAM markers after *p(V)s(V)-,* and *ye-/yi-* points to a serial verb construction, where only the last verb is inflected for TAM. However, this is cross-linguistically attested only for consecutive verbs that share a common subject.[^68] For all these reasons, the verbal compound of the funerary benedictions requires further study. Nevertheless, the element *ye-* in these benedictions has nothing to do with the prefix *ye-* we found in the royal texts. It is just a further instance of the many homonymous morphemes that are attested in Meroitic. -[^67]: The frequency of *yi-* is 6,2% according to Schenkel, “Zur Struktur des Verbalkomplexes in den Schlußformel der meroitischen Totentexte," p. 8. For Nobiin *ií-*, more commonly used with a causative suffix in the compound *ií-gìr,* see Werner, *Grammatik des Nobiin,* p. 356. Note that “say” is frequently used as a light verb (but not as a causative auxiliary) in the languages of Sudan, regardless of the linguistic family. For Andaandi, see El-Guzuuli, "The Uses and Orthography of the Verb 'Say' in Andaandi"; for Nyimang, see Stevenson *Grammar of the Nyimang Language,* p. 147 [CHECK] and Rilly, *Le méroïtique et sa famille linguistique,* p. 210; for Beja, see Vanhove, *Le bedja,* 146-14. +[^67]: The frequency of *yi-* is 6,2% according to Schenkel, “Zur Struktur des Verbalkomplexes in den Schlußformel der meroitischen Totentexte," p. 8. For Nobiin *ií-*, more commonly used with a causative suffix in the compound *ií-gìr,* see Werner, *Grammatik des Nobiin,* p. 356. Note that “say” is frequently used as a light verb (but not as a causative auxiliary) in the languages of Sudan, regardless of the linguistic family. For Andaandi, see El-Guzuuli, "The Uses and Orthography of the Verb 'Say' in Andaandi"; for Ama, see Stevenson *Grammar of the Nyimang Language,* p. 147 [CHECK] and Rilly, *Le méroïtique et sa famille linguistique,* p. 210; for Beja, see Vanhove, *Le bedja,* 146-14. [^68]: See Haspelmath, "The Serial Verb Construction," esp. pp. 409-411 (with possible exception in ex. 31, where two different subjects are found). Finally, another element *ye-* is attested in several kinship noun phrases, also in funerary inscriptions. The “filiation” part of these texts specifies the mother and father of the deceased, who is said to be “the person born of X” and “the person begotten by Y.” In the major part of the inscriptions, these two compounds are *te-dxe-l* (or *t-dxe-l*) and *t-erike-l.* They include a prefixed element *t(e)-,* the participles *dxe* “born” and *erike* “begotten,” and the final article, which has a nominalizing role. Several texts include a variant with a first element *y(e)-,* namely *ye-dxe-l* and *y-erike-l.* The forms including *y(e)-* and *t(e)-* can even be found together in the same inscription, giving a further example of the aforementioned *varietas* sought by Meroitic scribes. Another kinship term, *yetmde* “younger in the maternal line, i.e., nephew/niece,” may provide the key to the element *ye-* in filiation clauses. It includes the word *mde* which refers to the mother’s family in this matrilineal society. The first element is *yet-* (pronounced /eta/ or /eda/), but has many variants: *yete, yed, yen* (with assimilation before ­*mde*). The elements *te-* and *ye-* in filiation are probably two eroded forms of *yet-,* which can be compared with Proto-Nubian *\*id,* Proto-Taman *\*at* “person,” and Nara *eítá* “body.”[^x33]. “The person born” and “the person begotten” are therefore accurate translations of *ye-dxe* and *y-erike*. The element *ye-* in these contexts is therefore originally a noun and has nothing to do with the homonymous prefix found in royal inscriptions. @@ -509,48 +689,109 @@ In light of the above, it seems certain, first, that the verbs in the narratives [^73]: Fusion of two consecutive vowels into one. [^74]: For instance Karko *ê* "I" (Jakobi, *Kordofan Nubian,* 42) from Proto-Nubian *\*a-i.* -If the form of the Meroitic marker matches its cognates in other NES languages, its syntactic use shows a substantial difference to them. In all these languages, the subject pronoun is located at the beginning of the sentence and the verb at the end (SOV word order) as in these examples from Nobiin and Nyimang. +If the form of the Meroitic marker matches its cognates in other NES languages, its syntactic use shows a substantial difference to them. In all these languages, the subject pronoun is located at the beginning of the sentence and the verb at the end (SOV word order) as in these examples from Nobiin and Ama.[^ex46] -(46) +[^ex46]: Example (46) based on Werner, *Grammatik des Nobiin,* p. 291. -(47) +{{< gloss "(46)" >}} +{r} **Nobiin** +{g} *ày*,[1sg]({sc})|*tùuɲì-n*,boys-[gen]({sc})|*mèdrèsá-l*,school-[loc]({sc})|*júù-r*,go-[1sg]({sc})| +{r} “I go to the boys’ school.” +{{< /gloss >}} + +{{< gloss "(47)" >}} +{r} **Ama** +{g} *à*,[1sg]({sc})|*ɲúfà-ŋ*,father.[2sg.gen-dat]({sc})|*ēlò-ɔ̀*,milk-[acc]({sc})|*têg*,give.[ipfv]({sc})| +{r} “I give (some) milk to your father.” +{{< /gloss >}} The only NES-languages which have personal prefixes appended to the verb are the Taman languages, that is, Tama and Mararit. However, these suffixes, namely *nV-* for the 1st person, *V-* for the 2nd person, and ∅- (zero suffix) for the 3rd person,[^75] are distinct from the subject pronouns, which are optional as shown in the following examples.[^76] In the second sentence, the subject pronoun is here for emphasis and could be translated “as for me.” [^75]: These prefixes (where *V* stands for a variable vowel) are the same for the singular and plural persons. [^76]: The data are cited from the unpublished Tama grammar of Pierre Palayer. -(48) +{{< gloss "(48)" >}} +{r} **Tama** +{g} *dʊ́t*,big|*n-ànᵻ́*,[1sg]({sc})-be| +{r} “I am big.” +{{< /gloss >}} -(49) +{{< gloss "(49)" >}} +{g} *wâ*,[1sg]({sc})|*tàmʊ́t*,Tama|*n-ànᵻ́*,[1sg]({sc})-be| +{r} “I am a Tama.” +{{< /gloss >}} This structure seems an innovation of the Taman group within the NES languages. Generally speaking, the personal affixes appended to the verb in Nara, Nubian, and Taman strongly differ from each other and cannot be reconstructed in Proto-NES. It seems that the original person marking combined independent pronouns (which are clearly related in the daughter languages) and verbal plural suffixes, which have been studied above. This system still operates in the Nyima languages. The Meroitic system – at least in the passages of the royal inscriptions under examination – seems close to the Proto-NES and Nyima system, but has innovated by displacing the subject pronoun before the verb. However, the connection between this pronoun and the following verb is not as strong as it is for person markers embedded in verbal compounds. This innovation created a specific OSV word order for sentences including a subject pronoun, whereas the original SOV order was preserved in sentences with nominal subject. ## Another Person Marker in Meroitic Royal Texts? {#iii5} -Instead of *(y)e-,* an alternative prefix *w-* appears before the verbal forms of *er-k* “take, capture," *kb* “seize, and *bqo* “take control” within the royal texts REM 1044, 1003, and 0094. It never occurs with *ked* “kill,” as can be seen in the examples below. +Instead of *(y)e-,* an alternative prefix *w-* appears before the verbal forms of *er-k* “take, capture," *kb* “seize, and *bqo* “take control” within the royal texts REM 1044, 1003, and 0094. It never occurs with *ked* “kill,” as can be seen in the examples below.[^ex77] -(50) +[^ex77]: In (50), the reading of the first signs was made possible thanks to excellent photos and interpretation by Gilda Ferrandino in her doctoral thesis, *Studio dei testi reali meroitici,* p. 65 and pl. 29.1. For the archaic sign conventionally transcribed *H,* see Rilly, *La langue du royaume de Méroé,* p. 353. In all likelihood, the form *kbxte* comes from *kb-bx-te* after haplography, as the object seems to be a plural and, accordingly, should marked in the verb by the suffix *bx*. -(51) + In (51), the word *tdxsene* includes the noun phrase *t-dx-* meaning “child (of a mother)” but the following sequence *-se-ne* is obscure. It ultimately might be a proper name, Tadakhesene, with an ending *-ne* that is common in the Meroitic personal names. -(52) + Examples (52) and (53) differ only in the spellings of *(y)emoqe* “belongings (?)”and *(e)qebese* “their’. -(53) + In (54), a direct genitive *Aqtoye mtekdi 2* “the two daughters of Aqatoye” should be expected for unalienable possession (cf. Rilly, *La langue du royaume de Méroé,* pp. 525-527). However, the inscription REM 0094, engraved for the Blemmyan kinglet Khamaradoye after the fall of Meroe, is very late (c. 420 CE) and includes some strange features that could have resulted from language contact with Old Nubian and Blemmyan (Old Beja dialect), in which no distinction was made between alienable and unalienable possession (for Beja, see Vanhove, *Le bedja,* p. 40). -(54) +{{< gloss "(50)" >}} +{r} **Meroitic** +{g} *heHle*,?|*qoleb :*,[3pl]({sc})|*ahtero-l*,?|*am*,?|***w***-*k*[*b*]-*bx-te*,[pm]({sc})-seize-[vnm-tam]({sc})| +{r} “? seized ? them ???” (REM 1044/68-70) +{{< /gloss >}} + +{{< gloss "(51)" >}} +{g} *qorte*,palace(?).[gen]({sc})|*dxe-leb :*,child-[det-pl]({sc})|*wide-bese*,brother-[3pl.gen]({sc})|*aroqitm*,Aroqitama|*tdxsene*,Tadakhesene|***w***-*er-k*,[pm]({sc})-take-[plc]({sc})| +{r} “? captured the children of the palace (and) their brother Aroqitama ???” +(syntax uncertain; REM 1044/152–155) +{{< /gloss >}} + +{{< gloss "(52)" >}} +{g} *kdi-se-l-w :*, woman-each-[det-acc]({sc})|*abr-se-l-w :*,man-each-[det-acc]({sc})|*yemoqe :*,belongings(?)|*eqebese-wit :*,[3pl.gen-det]({sc})(?)|***w***-*kb-te*,[pm]({sc})-seize-[tam]({sc})| +{r} “? seized each man, each woman (and) their belongings(?)” (REM 1003/23–24) +{{< /gloss >}} + +{{< gloss "(53)" >}} +{g} *kdi-se-l-w :*, woman-each-[det-acc]({sc})|*abr-se-l-w :*,man-each-[det-acc]({sc})|*emoqe :*,belongings(?)|*eqebese-wit :*,[3pl.gen-det]({sc})(?)|***w***-*kb-te*,[pm]({sc})-seize-[tam]({sc})| +{r} “? seized each man, each woman (and) their belongings(?)” (REM 1003/31–35) +{{< /gloss >}} + +{{< gloss "(54)" >}} +{g} *wedi*,?|*dxe*,child|*mte-kdi*,young-woman|*Aqtoye : -se*,Aqatoye-[gen]({sc})|*2*,2|***w***-*bqo-b-te*,[pm]({sc})-take.control-[vnm-tam]({sc})| +{r} “? took control of ??? the two young daughters of Aqatoye” (REM 0094/24) +{{< /gloss >}} There is no doubt that the prefixed element *w-,* which is paradigmatically parallel to the morpheme *(y)e-,* is also a person subject marker. We should expect it to mark a different person, which can only be the 1st plural or the 3rd singular or plural, since there is no interlocutor in these sections of the royal inscriptions. Unfortunately, the context of these passages with *w-* does not provide much information, chiefly because of our scanty knowledge of Meroitic, but also because of the poor preservation of some parts of the stelae REM 1044 and 1003. However, it seems that these passages are the continuity of the sentences where the subject is in the first person, either explicitly or implicitly. The passage below precedes (51) in Taneyidamani’s stela (REM 1044/141-155). The lines that follow are unfortunately badly eroded. -(55) +{{< gloss "(55)" >}} +{r} *Ahotone qorte : drteyose-l :* ***e***-*ked-e-to :* +{r} “I killed Akhutone, the ??? of the palace(?). +{r} *Nhror wide-l :* ***e***-*ked-e-to :* +{r} I killed (his) brother Nakharura. +{r} *kdi : ste-bese : dnetro :* +{r} I ??? their mother [lit. 'woman-tutor']. +{r} *sxseli : holno-leb : asxdose : tedd : qoleb : axro tewideb-wit :* ***e***-*ked-b-to :* +{r} I killed ??? them, namely the ???, the ???. +{r} *krtedse : xrpxe-se-mlo-l : tk-to :* +{r} I seized the good ??? governor. +{r} *qorte : dxe-leb : wide-bese : Aroqitm : Tdxsene :* ***w***-*erk :* +{r} ? captured the children of the palace(?) (and) their brother Aroqitama ???.” (= ex. 51) +{{< /gloss >}} -Three of these sentences include the subject pronoun marker *e-* “I” in the verbal compounds *e-ked-e-to* (twice) and *e-ked-b-to.* In two other sentences, the prefixed pronoun is absent, but implicit, in *dnetro*(?) and *tk-to.* It is difficult to account for the subject shift in the last sentence (51), where the prefixed pronoun *w-* replaces *e-*. No solution is fully satisfactory, but the most acceptable is to assume that the antecedent of the prefixed pronoun is one of the nouns of the same sentence that would be placed as its topic. These topicalized constructions are well documented in Meroitic.[^x34] They can also be found, under Meroitic influence, in the Egyptian texts of the late Napatan royal inscriptions, as in this example from king Nastasen’s stela (ll. 12-13, after *FHN* II: 478): +Three of these sentences include the subject pronoun marker *e-* “I” in the verbal compounds *e-ked-e-to* (twice) and *e-ked-b-to.* In two other sentences, the prefixed pronoun is absent, but implicit, in *dnetro*(?) and *tk-to.* It is difficult to account for the subject shift in the last sentence (51), where the prefixed pronoun *w-* replaces *e-*. No solution is fully satisfactory, but the most acceptable is to assume that the antecedent of the prefixed pronoun is one of the nouns of the same sentence that would be placed as its topic. These topicalized constructions are well documented in Meroitic.[^x34] They can also be found, under Meroitic influence, in the Egyptian texts of the late Napatan royal inscriptions, as in this example from king Nastasen’s stela (ll. 12–13, after *FHN* II: 478): [^x34]: Rilly, *La langue du Royaume de Méroé,* pp. 547-548. -(56) +{{< gloss "(56)" >}} +{r} **Egyptian** +{r} *jr=w šn jr=j rmt-ꜥꜣ, ḥ(m)-ntr Jmn dr=w* +{r} “They made obeisance to me, (to wit) all the notables and priests of Amun +{r} *jry=w smꜣ jr=j, rꜣ nb* +{r} They blessed me, (to wit) every mouth." +{{< /gloss >}} -If so, the tentative translation of (51) suggested above must be thoroughly corrected. A singular object is expected, because there is no plural object marker at the end of the verbal compound. Maybe the translation should be “(as for) the children of the palace (?) (and) their brother Aroqitama, they captured Tadakhesene.” If this solution is syntactically acceptable, it is less so morphologically. A plural marker would be expected, like in *qe-be-se* “of them” ([§3.2](#ii2) above). In addition, an element *w-* is attested in the late text REM 0094 as a variant of the singular 3rd person pronoun *qo/qe* “he/she, this” (cf. [§3.1](#ii1)). Instead of *qe-se, qo-se* "his/her” (lit. “of him/her”), a form *w-se,* with variants *we-se,* and even *w-si,* in the same text, is attested: *semle: w-si* “his wife,” *ste: wese* “his mother” (line 26). Finally, no cognate can be found in other NES-languages, all of which have for “they” at least traces of a plural element *\*-gV.* In conclusion, the prefixed element *w-* in verbal compounds remains unexplained and needs further examination. +If so, the tentative translation of (51) suggested above must be thoroughly corrected. A singular object is expected, because there is no plural object marker at the end of the verbal compound. Maybe the translation should be “(as for) the children of the palace (?) (and) their brother Aroqitama, they captured Tadakhesene.” If this solution is syntactically acceptable, it is less so morphologically. A plural marker would be expected, like in *qe-be-se* “of them” ([3.2](#ii2) above). In addition, an element *w-* is attested in the late text REM 0094 as a variant of the singular 3rd person pronoun *qo/qe* “he/she, this” (cf. [3.1](#ii1)). Instead of *qe-se, qo-se* "his/her” (lit. “of him/her”), a form *w-se,* with variants *we-se,* and even *w-si,* in the same text, is attested: *semle: w-si* “his wife,” *ste: wese* “his mother” (line 26). Finally, no cognate can be found in other NES-languages, all of which have for “they” at least traces of a plural element *\*-gV.* In conclusion, the prefixed element *w-* in verbal compounds remains unexplained and needs further examination. # The Second Person Markers {#iv} @@ -574,19 +815,37 @@ The final prayers of the funerary texts, which Griffith termed “benedictions, **Table 3. The general scheme for benedictions A–D.** -The prefixed elements *pVsV-* or *yi-,* which obviously have a causative value but are not yet fully understood, have been studied above in [§4.3](#iii3). The element *-x(e)* in the singular, *-bx(e)* in the plural, is a verbal number marker that has been analysed in section [§3.3](#ii3). As the funerary benedictions are basically prayers to the gods, imperative or optative in the 2nd person plural are expected. The verbal TAM ending here is *-k-te* or *-ke-te* with a plural suffix *-k(e).* The singular TAM ending is *-te,* as seen in examples (19), (29)-(31), each of which contains a prayer to a single god. Cross-linguistically, the singular imperative is generally a simple verbal stem, e.g. English *see!,* Latin *vide!,* and Middle Egyptian *m3!* This is also true for the living NES languages: Nobiin *nàl!,* Midob *kóod!,* etc.[^84] For this reason, the verbal form with ending *-te,* which is used in the royal blessings and funerary benedictions, must be regarded as an optative rather than an imperative. However, an optional particle *-se,* which is added to the verbal compound in several funerary inscriptions,[^85] has an Old Nubian parallel in the command marker -ⲥⲟ or -ⲥⲱ.[^x35] Be it related or borrowed, this particle shows the semantic proximity of the Meroitic optative with the Old Nubian imperative. +The prefixed elements *pVsV-* or *yi-,* which obviously have a causative value but are not yet fully understood, have been studied above in [4.3](#iii3). The element *-x(e)* in the singular, *-bx(e)* in the plural, is a verbal number marker that has been analysed in section [3.3](#ii3). As the funerary benedictions are basically prayers to the gods, imperative or optative in the 2nd person plural are expected. The verbal TAM ending here is *-k-te* or *-ke-te* with a plural suffix *-k(e).* The singular TAM ending is *-te,* as seen in examples (19), (29)-(31), each of which contains a prayer to a single god. Cross-linguistically, the singular imperative is generally a simple verbal stem, e.g. English *see!,* Latin *vide!,* and Middle Egyptian *m3!* This is also true for the living NES languages: Nobiin *nàl!,* Midob *kóod!,* etc.[^84] For this reason, the verbal form with ending *-te,* which is used in the royal blessings and funerary benedictions, must be regarded as an optative rather than an imperative. However, an optional particle *-se,* which is added to the verbal compound in several funerary inscriptions,[^85] has an Old Nubian parallel in the command marker -ⲥⲟ or -ⲥⲱ.[^x35] Be it related or borrowed, this particle shows the semantic proximity of the Meroitic optative with the Old Nubian imperative. [^x35]: Van Gerven Oei, *A Reference Grammar of Old Nubian,* §4.2. -[^84]: In the Nubian group, for Nobiin: Werner, *Grammatik des Nobiin,* p. 145; for Andaandi: Armbruster, *Dongolese Nubian,* pp. 194-195; for Midob: Werner, *Tìdn-Áal,* pp. 58-59. In the Nara group, for Higir: Thompson, "Nera," p. 467; for Mogoreeb: Elsadig, *Major Word Categories in Nara,* 66. For Tama: Palayer's unpublished grammar, §4.3; for Sungor: Lukas, “Die Sprache der Sungor in Wadai," pp. 192, 198-199; for Mararit: El-Nazir, *Major Word Categories in Mararit,* pp. 57-58. For Nyimang: Stevenson, *Grammar of the Nyimang Language,* pp. 106, 110 and Stevenson, Rottland \& Jakobi, “The Verb in Nyimang and Dinik,” p. 30; for Afitti, ibid., p. 33. In all these languages, the singular imperative is generally the simple stem of the verb. However, a suffix *-i* is found for some verbs in Nubian, Taman, and Nyima. Suppletive forms for basic verbs are attested in Nara, Taman, and Nyima. +[^84]: In the Nubian group, for Nobiin: Werner, *Grammatik des Nobiin,* p. 145; for Andaandi: Armbruster, *Dongolese Nubian,* pp. 194-195; for Midob: Werner, *Tìdn-Áal,* pp. 58-59. In the Nara group, for Higir: Thompson, "Nera," p. 467; for Mogoreeb: Elsadig, *Major Word Categories in Nara,* 66. For Tama: Palayer's unpublished grammar, §4.3; for Sungor: Lukas, “Die Sprache der Sungor in Wadai," pp. 192, 198-199; for Mararit: El-Nazir, *Major Word Categories in Mararit,* pp. 57-58. For Ama: Stevenson, *Grammar of the Nyimang Language,* pp. 106, 110 and Stevenson, Rottland \& Jakobi, “The Verb in Nyimang and Dinik,” p. 30; for Afitti, ibid., p. 33. In all these languages, the singular imperative is generally the simple stem of the verb. However, a suffix *-i* is found for some verbs in Nubian, Taman, and Nyima. Suppletive forms for basic verbs are attested in Nara, Taman, and Nyima. [^85]: The particle *-se* may have an emphatic role, such as *donc* in French *dis-moi donc!* or the use of the auxiliary *do* in the English counterpart *do tell me!.* The resulting verbal compound is *pVsV-k(e)-te-se,* often reduced to *pVsV-k(e)-se* with regressive assimilation (see (40) above); cf. Hintze, “Beiträge zur meroitischen Grammatik,” p. 75 and Rilly, *La langue du Royaume de Méroé,* p. 563. The imperative proper, in all likelihood, is the verbal form devoid of TAM markers which is used instead of the optative in several funerary texts. As shown in the following examples, it occurs either in one or two of the three main benedictions A, B, and C (a further example of *varietas*), or in all of them. Example (58) is drawn from REM 0369, an offering table from Shablul engraved for a single deceased. Example (59) is cited from a stela found in the same cemetery, REM 0381, and engraved for two persons, hence the plural verbal marker at the end of verbal compounds.[^86] [^86]: The verbal plural marker *-bxe* here appears as *-b,* without the objective case marker. See (43) and its comment above. -(58) +{{< gloss "(58)" >}} +{r} **Meroitic** +{r} Benediction A +{g} *a*<*to*>,water|*mhe*,abundant|*pso-h :*,[caus]({sc})-drink.[imp.2]({sc})| +{r} “Make her/him drink plentiful water." +{r} Benediction B +{g} *at*,bread|*mhe*,abundant|*psi-xr* [*:*],[caus]({sc})-eat.[imp.2]({sc})| +{r} “Make her/him eat plentiful bread." +{r} Benediction C +{g} *x(re)*,meal|*mlo-l*,good-[det]({sc})|*hol :*,present.[imp.2]({sc})| +{r} “Present her/him with a good meal." +{{< /gloss >}} -(59) +{{< gloss "(59)" >}} +{r} Benediction A +{g} *a*to*,water|<*m*>*he*,abundant|*pso-he-b :*,[caus]({sc})-drink.[imp.2-vnm]({sc})| +{r} “Make her/him drink plentiful water." +{r} Benediction B +{g} *at*,bread|*mhe*,abundant|*psi-xr-b :*,[caus]({sc})-eat.[imp.2-vnm]({sc})| +{r} “Make her/him eat plentiful bread." +{{< /gloss >}} In these imperative forms, there is virtually no plural marker. A final suffix *-k(e)* for the 2nd person plural is expected, but it is only attested in a very small number of funerary inscriptions.[^87] However, it seems that in some epitaphs, the two deities Isis and Osiris, to whom these prayers were addressed, were syntactically regarded as a single god, as shown by the use of a single vocative suffix for both, located after the second noun.[^x36] Moreover, in the final invocations that resume the initial call to the deities, Osiris is sometimes omitted.[^x37] Finally, Isis (or one the goddesses assimilated to her in the Meroitic funerary cults, namely Nephthys, Nut, or Maat), is often figured in the private offering tables and the funerary chapels, whereas Osiris is never present, at least in the non-royal contexts with with which here we are dealing.[^88] I surmise that the instances of the imperative are addressed to Isis. This would explain why the 2nd person singular, and not plural, is used. @@ -599,18 +858,30 @@ Furthermore, a not uncommon variant of the verbal suffix *-te,* found only in th [^89]: Cf. Griffith, *Karanòg,* p. 48. The alternation *-te/-to* is apparently a phonetic, not morphological, feature. It also occurs in person names. Queen Amanishakheto’s name, for instance, is generally written *(A)mnisxeto,* but is spelled *(A)mnisxete* in REM 0706, 1055, 1293, and 1346. -(60) - +{{< gloss "(60)" >}} +{r} Benediction A +{g} *a*to*,water|*mhe*,abundant|*pso-he*,[caus]({sc})-drink.[imp.2]({sc})| +{r} “Make her/him drink plentiful water." +{r} Benediction B +{g} *at*,bread|*mxe :*,abundant|*psi-xr-to*,[caus]({sc})-eat.[opt.2sg]({sc})| +{r} “May you make her/him eat plentiful bread." +{r} Benediction C +{g} *x(re)*,meal|*mlo-l :*,good-[det]({sc})|*psi-tx-to*,[caus]({sc})-present-[opt.2sg]({sc})| +{r} “May you have her/him presented with a good meal." +{r} Benediction D +{g} *x(re)*,meal|*lh-l :*,large-[det]({sc})|*psi-hol-to*,[caus]({sc})-present-[opt.2sg]({sc})| +{r} “May you have her/him presented with a large meal." +{{< /gloss >}} From the above, it appears that the markers of the Meroitic imperative and optative moods are as follows: -| | 2sg | 2pl | | +| | [2sg]({sc}) | [2pl]({sc}) | | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Imperative | -∅ | -k(e) | (-se) | | Optative | -∅-te/-to | -k(e)-te | (-se) | **Table 4. Meroitic imperative and optative suffixes.** -The use of the suffix *-k/-g* to express the plurality of actors in the imperative (and in other moods) is widespread in Nilo-Saharan languages and particularly frequent in the NES family. Although it may have the same origin as the verbal plural marker, it must not be confused with it. The exception here is Nyimang, where the same morpheme *-(ì)d̪ì* is used both verbal plural marker ([§3.3.2](#ii32)) and marker of the plural imperative: *kílí* “hear!,” pl. *kíld̪ì* “hear ye!”[^90] In Nara, the plural imperative is marked with a suffix *-aga.* This morpheme is attested in the two major dialects, namely in Higir *ay* “make!,” pl. *ay-aga* “make ye!”[^x40] and in Mogoreeb, *aw* “make!,” pl. *aw-aga* “make ye!”[^x41] In Mararit (Taman group), the plural imperative is marked with a morpheme *-k-,* which can be prefixed or suffixed according to the verb classes: *sîn* “eat!,” pl. *kí-síŋ-gì* “eat ye!” (prefixed); *kɛ̀dɛ̀k* “cut!,” pl. *kɛ̀d-k-ɛ̀k* “cut ye!” (suffixed).[^91] In the Nubian group, the suffix *\*-k/-g* is perhaps preserved in Midob in a palatalized form *-ic*: *kóod* “see!,” pl. *kóod-íc* “see ye!,”[^x42] but the difference with the plural verbal marker, as in Nyimang, is not clear. The other branches of Nubian seem to have innovated separately. In Andaandi, the 2pl imperative is marked with a suffix *-we*[^x38] and with a suffix *-an* in Old Nubian and Nobiin.[^x39] However, Old Nubian has a morpheme *-ke* “you,” which Van Gerven Oei analyzes as a subject clitic.[^92] It is not used for the “positive” imperative like in Meroitic, but is part of the jussive -ⲛⲕⲉ, vetitive -ⲧⲁⲛⲕⲉ(ⲥⲟ), and affirmative -ⲗⲕⲉ/-ⲥⲕⲉ. This morpheme is probably related to the Meroitic suffix *-k(e)* used in the plural imperative. +The use of the suffix *-k/-g* to express the plurality of actors in the imperative (and in other moods) is widespread in Nilo-Saharan languages and particularly frequent in the NES family. Although it may have the same origin as the verbal plural marker, it must not be confused with it. The exception here is Ama, where the same morpheme *-(ì)d̪ì* is used both verbal plural marker ([3.3.2](#ii32)) and marker of the plural imperative: *kílí* “hear!,” pl. *kíld̪ì* “hear ye!”[^90] In Nara, the plural imperative is marked with a suffix *-aga.* This morpheme is attested in the two major dialects, namely in Higir *ay* “make!,” pl. *ay-aga* “make ye!”[^x40] and in Mogoreeb, *aw* “make!,” pl. *aw-aga* “make ye!”[^x41] In Mararit (Taman group), the plural imperative is marked with a morpheme *-k-,* which can be prefixed or suffixed according to the verb classes: *sîn* “eat!,” pl. *kí-síŋ-gì* “eat ye!” (prefixed); *kɛ̀dɛ̀k* “cut!,” pl. *kɛ̀d-k-ɛ̀k* “cut ye!” (suffixed).[^91] In the Nubian group, the suffix *\*-k/-g* is perhaps preserved in Midob in a palatalized form *-ic*: *kóod* “see!,” pl. *kóod-íc* “see ye!,”[^x42] but the difference with the plural verbal marker, as in Ama, is not clear. The other branches of Nubian seem to have innovated separately. In Andaandi, the 2pl imperative is marked with a suffix *-we*[^x38] and with a suffix *-an* in Old Nubian and Nobiin.[^x39] However, Old Nubian has a morpheme *-ke* “you,” which Van Gerven Oei analyzes as a subject clitic.[^92] It is not used for the “positive” imperative like in Meroitic, but is part of the jussive -ⲛⲕⲉ, vetitive -ⲧⲁⲛⲕⲉ(ⲥⲟ), and affirmative -ⲗⲕⲉ/-ⲥⲕⲉ. This morpheme is probably related to the Meroitic suffix *-k(e)* used in the plural imperative. [^x38]: Armbruster, *Dongolese Nubian,* pp. 194-195. [^x39]: Van Gerven Oei, *A Reference Grammar of Old Nubian,* §10.1.5, Werner, *Grammatik de Nobiin,* pp. 145-146. @@ -629,30 +900,67 @@ In 1999, the archaeological team of the Berlin Museum in Naga found a small stel On the reverse of the stela, an inscription in Meroitic cursive script is engraved on six lines. The first three lines include the following prayer. -(61) +{{< gloss "(61)" >}} +{g} *apedemk :*,Apedemak|*dqri-te-l-i :*,Daqari-[loc-det-voc]({sc})|*amni*[*sxeto :*],Amanishakheto|*qor :* (< *qore-l*),ruler.[det]({sc})|*kdke-l :*,candace-[det]({sc})|*pwrit(e)*,life|*(a)rese :*,[2sg.gen]({sc})|*yel-x-te :*,give-[vnm-opt.2sg]({sc})|*pwrite*,life|*debse :*,[2pl.gen]({sc})|*el-x-te*,give-[vnm-opt.2sg]({sc})| +{r} “O Apedemak (who are) in Daqari, to Amanishakheto, the ruler, the Candace, give the life from you [sg]({sc}), give the life from you [pl]({sc})!” (REM 1293) +{{< /gloss >}} -The god is here invited to shower his gifts upon the ruling queen, and chiefly the most precious of them, *pwrite* “life, vital strength." Similar instances of this prayer for King Amanakhareqerama have previously been quoted in (29) and (30). The royal text REM 1293 is engraved with great care and a sense of aesthetics that is missing in so many private inscriptions. The different phrases are accurately separated by word dividers. Conspicuously, the phrases *pwritrese* and *pwrite debse* do not include a word divider after *pwrite.* Furthermore, in the first group, *pwrite* and its extension are agglomerated into a single unit. Due to the conventions of the Meroitic alphasyllabary (see [§2](#i)), the second element must have been *arese,* with an initial /a/ which was not explicitly written, because it occurred in internal position in this contracted phrase. The noun *pwrite* was pronounced /bawarit/ with the zero value of the grapheme *e.* So, the sequence *pwrite + arese* was pronounced /bawaritaresə/ and was accordingly spelled *pwritrese,* with default vowel /a/ after *t.* Additionally, the second term could not be *\*\*rese* because the phoneme /r/, in Meroitic as well as in all the NES languages, cannot occur in initial position.[^x43] +The god is here invited to shower his gifts upon the ruling queen, and chiefly the most precious of them, *pwrite* “life, vital strength." Similar instances of this prayer for King Amanakhareqerama have previously been quoted in (29) and (30). The royal text REM 1293 is engraved with great care and a sense of aesthetics that is missing in so many private inscriptions. The different phrases are accurately separated by word dividers. Conspicuously, the phrases *pwritrese* and *pwrite debse* do not include a word divider after *pwrite.* Furthermore, in the first group, *pwrite* and its extension are agglomerated into a single unit. Due to the conventions of the Meroitic alphasyllabary (see [2](#i)), the second element must have been *arese,* with an initial /a/ which was not explicitly written, because it occurred in internal position in this contracted phrase. The noun *pwrite* was pronounced /bawarit/ with the zero value of the grapheme *e.* So, the sequence *pwrite + arese* was pronounced /bawaritaresə/ and was accordingly spelled *pwritrese,* with default vowel /a/ after *t.* Additionally, the second term could not be *\*\*rese* because the phoneme /r/, in Meroitic as well as in all the NES languages, cannot occur in initial position.[^x43] [^x43]: Rilly, *Le méroïtique et sa famille linguistique,* p. 230. -The close connection between *pwrite* and its successive extensions, *arese* and *debse* is best explained if the latter are determiners. They both include the genitival postposition “of”, which also was part of the possessives *qe-se* “his/her” and *qe-be-se* “their” ([§3.2](#ii2)). Consequently, in the sentence from REM 1293 cited above, the sequences *are-se* and *deb-se* must be considered as possessive adjectives, that is, genitival forms of two personal pronouns, *are* and *deb.* As the context is a prayer to a deity, the only possibility is the second person: “O Apedemak, give your life to the queen”, that is “give her the life (coming) from you.” +The close connection between *pwrite* and its successive extensions, *arese* and *debse* is best explained if the latter are determiners. They both include the genitival postposition “of”, which also was part of the possessives *qe-se* “his/her” and *qe-be-se* “their” ([3.2](#ii2)). Consequently, in the sentence from REM 1293 cited above, the sequences *are-se* and *deb-se* must be considered as possessive adjectives, that is, genitival forms of two personal pronouns, *are* and *deb.* As the context is a prayer to a deity, the only possibility is the second person: “O Apedemak, give your life to the queen”, that is “give her the life (coming) from you.” ### Egyptian Parallels This wording was already used in the Egyptian texts of the royal inscriptions engraved for the kings of the 25th Dynasty and their Napatan successors. Example (62) below is cited from the dedication engraved in the Temple of Mut, built by King Taharqo inside the cliff of Jebel Barkal (ca. 680 BCE). Example (63) is a text written on each side of the figure of goddess Mut in the same temple (after *FHN* I: 133). Example (64) is an excerpt from a stela of the Napatan king Anlamani (late 7th c. BCE) erected in the temple of Kawa (after *FHN* I: 322). In the three texts, the passages of interest to the question under study are in bold characters. -(62) +{{< gloss "(62)" >}} +{r} **Egyptian** +{r} *dd-mdw n Mwt, nb*<*.t*> *Tꜣ-Sty* +{r} “Words to be said by Mut, mistress of Nubia: +{r} *Jmn-Rꜥ nb ns.wt Tꜣ.wy ḥry-jb* <*m*> *Dw wꜥb* +{r} ‘O Amun-Re, Lord of the thrones of the Two-Lands who is in the Pure Mountain +{r} *sꜣ=k mry=k Thrq ꜥnḫ d.t* +{r} (as for) your beloved son, Taharqo, may he live forever, +{r} *dj=k* <*n*>*=f* ***ꜥnḫ dd wꜣs nb ḫr=j*** +{r} you have given to him **all life, stability and power from me,** +{r} ***snb nb ḫr=j*** *mj Rꜥ d.t* +{r} **all health from me**, like Re, for ever’.” (Temple of Mut, inscription beside of the goddess standing behind Amun) +{{< /gloss >}} -(63) +{{< gloss "(63)" >}} +{r} *jr.n=f m mnw=f n mw-t=f Mwt* +{r} “He made (this) as his monument for his mother Mut, +{r} *nb*<*.t*> *p.t ḥnw.t Tꜣ-Sty* +{r} Lady of Heaven, Mistress of Nubia +{r} *qd=f pr=s: sꜥꜣ=f ḥw.t-ntr=s m mꜣw m jnr ḥd nfr rwd* +{r} he built her house and enlarged her temple anew in fine, white sandstone, +{r} *dj=s n=f* ***ꜥnh nb ḫr=s,*** +{r} so that she might give him **all life from her,** +{r} ***dd nb ḫr=s, wꜣs nb ḫr***[***=s***] +{r} **all stability from her, and all power from [her]**.” (Temple of Mut, dedication to the goddess) +{{< /gloss >}} -(64) +{{< gloss "(64)" >}} +{r} *ḫꜥ Jmn-Rꜥ Gm-Jtn jw=f ꜥḫꜥ m-bꜣḫ=f* +{r} “Amun-Re of Gematon (Kawa) appeared as he (the king) stood before him, +{r} *dj ntr pn ḥr=f r=f* +{r} and this god turned his face to him +{r} *jr=f ꜣt ꜥꜣt ꜥḥꜥ ḥr sdm ddwt= f nb* +{r} and spent a long time standing and listening to all that he said +{r} *dj=f n=f* ***ꜥnḫ dd wꜣs nb ḫr=f*** +{r} and gave him **all life, stability, and power from him (Amun),** +{r} ***snb*** [***nb***] ***ḫr***[***=f***] ***ꜣwt-jb nb ḫr=f*** +{r} [**all**] **health from him, and all joy from him**.” (Enthronement stela of Anlamani (Kawa VIII/ 27–28)) +{{< /gloss >}} In all these passages, the Egyptian preposition *ḫr* is used: *ꜥnḫ nb ḫr=j* “all life from me,” *ꜥnḫ nb ḫr=f* “all life from him.” Its primary meaning is “near,” but it can be also used with the agent of a passive verb in which it is usually translated with “by,"[^x44] a closer meaning to the sense of this proposition in examples (62)-(64). In these passages, the deity connected with the gift of life is the source of this gift, but not necessarily the one who provides it. In (63) the goddess gives to the ruler the life which is coming from her, and in (64) Amun is also the source and the giver of life. By contrast, in (62) Mut is asking her husband Amun to give Taharqo the life coming from her.[^93] [^x44]: Gardiner, *Egyptian Grammar,* pp. 42, 121. [^93]: The complex distribution of roles in the last sentence, which includes the three grammatical persons together, is rare in this genre of Egyptian texts. Some mistakes in the use of the Egyptian personal suffixes are attested in late Napatan stelae written in poor Egyptian by local scribes. By contrast, the texts engraved in the temple of Mut were prepared by Egyptian scribes working for Taharqo during the heyday of the Kushite power. Consequently, the use of personal suffixes in (32) must be considered correct and deliberate. -In the Meroitic stela from Naga, the context bears similarities to the situation in (32). There are also three persons, namely the ruler, Amanishakheto, the lion-god Apedemak and his wife Amesemi, all of them figured on the obverse of the stela. The great difference between the Egyptian and the Meroitic texts is the position of the enunciator. In (32), Mut is the enunciator (1st person) and speaks to Amun (2nd person) about the king (3rd person). In REM 1293, the enunciator, as is common in the Meroitic prayers, is a fictive individual, who is never present in the text, so that there are no 1st person markers. He speaks to Apedemak and possibly to Amesemi (2nd person) about the queen (3rd person). The gift of life is presented to the ruler by Apedemak and the source of this life is expressed, first, by the phrase *are-se* and second by the phrase *deb-se.* The latter obviously includes the pronominal plural marker *-b,* cf. *qe-be-se* “their," lit. "of them, from them" ([§3.2](#ii2))[^94] In conclusion, the only solution is to regard *are-se* as a 2nd person singular possessive referring here to Apedemak, and *de-b-se* as a 2nd person plural possessive referring to both Apedemak and Amesemi. +In the Meroitic stela from Naga, the context bears similarities to the situation in (32). There are also three persons, namely the ruler, Amanishakheto, the lion-god Apedemak and his wife Amesemi, all of them figured on the obverse of the stela. The great difference between the Egyptian and the Meroitic texts is the position of the enunciator. In (32), Mut is the enunciator (1st person) and speaks to Amun (2nd person) about the king (3rd person). In REM 1293, the enunciator, as is common in the Meroitic prayers, is a fictive individual, who is never present in the text, so that there are no 1st person markers. He speaks to Apedemak and possibly to Amesemi (2nd person) about the queen (3rd person). The gift of life is presented to the ruler by Apedemak and the source of this life is expressed, first, by the phrase *are-se* and second by the phrase *deb-se.* The latter obviously includes the pronominal plural marker *-b,* cf. *qe-be-se* “their," lit. "of them, from them" ([3.2](#ii2))[^94] In conclusion, the only solution is to regard *are-se* as a 2nd person singular possessive referring here to Apedemak, and *de-b-se* as a 2nd person plural possessive referring to both Apedemak and Amesemi. [^94]: The Meroitic postposition *-se* can be appended to the name of the giver in inscriptions found on funerary offerings. In this case, *-se* is best translated as “from”; see Rilly, “Les chouettes ont des oreilles," pp. 489-491. @@ -701,10 +1009,10 @@ This alternation between /d/ and /r/ is obvious when comparing Meroitic and Nubi [^x47]: Rilly, *Le méroïtique et sa famille linguistique,* p. 18. [^101]: Ibid., pp. 367-368. -Consequently, the two Meroitic pronouns *are* and *deb* for the second person singular and plural, are reliable cognates of the Proto-Nubian forms *\*ed* and *\*ud-i.* The singular *are* was pronounced /ar/ ([§5.2.1](#iv21) and strongly resembles its Dongolawi counterpart *er.* The plural form *deb* was pronounced /deba/ and must derive from an older form *\*adeb.* For prosodic reasons, the initial vowel was weakened and finally dropped.[^102] Thus, the vacillation between /d/ and /r/, which was evidenced in the Nubian group, was also present in Meroitic, with /r/ in the singular and /d/ in the plural. Another possibility would be to that the original pronoun was *\*areb,* pronounced /areba/. This form would also have undergone the same apheresis, but, as /r/ can never be initial in Meroitic, it would have shifted to /d/, the closest stop to this vibrant. Finally, recall that /ba/ is the regular Meroitic reflex of Proto-SON *\*-gu,* which is known as plural marker for demonstratives in the eastern branch of the NES family.[^103] In this respect, the formation of the plural form in Meroitic differs not only from Proto-Nubian, where a plural marker *\*i* was used, but also from Proto-NES, where this morpheme was *\*gi*. +Consequently, the two Meroitic pronouns *are* and *deb* for the second person singular and plural, are reliable cognates of the Proto-Nubian forms *\*ed* and *\*ud-i.* The singular *are* was pronounced /ar/ ([5.2.1](#iv21) and strongly resembles its Dongolawi counterpart *er.* The plural form *deb* was pronounced /deba/ and must derive from an older form *\*adeb.* For prosodic reasons, the initial vowel was weakened and finally dropped.[^102] Thus, the vacillation between /d/ and /r/, which was evidenced in the Nubian group, was also present in Meroitic, with /r/ in the singular and /d/ in the plural. Another possibility would be to that the original pronoun was *\*areb,* pronounced /areba/. This form would also have undergone the same apheresis, but, as /r/ can never be initial in Meroitic, it would have shifted to /d/, the closest stop to this vibrant. Finally, recall that /ba/ is the regular Meroitic reflex of Proto-SON *\*-gu,* which is known as plural marker for demonstratives in the eastern branch of the NES family.[^103] In this respect, the formation of the plural form in Meroitic differs not only from Proto-Nubian, where a plural marker *\*i* was used, but also from Proto-NES, where this morpheme was *\*gi*. [^102]: Rilly, *La langue du Royaume de Méroé,* pp. 29-30, 289-291. -[^103]: Rilly, *Le méroïtique et sa famille linguistique,* p. 389. The eastern branch comprises Meroitic, Nubian, and Nara ([§1](§intro)). +[^103]: Rilly, *Le méroïtique et sa famille linguistique,* p. 389. The eastern branch comprises Meroitic, Nubian, and Nara ([1](§intro)). ### The Second Person Singular Subject Pronoun in Personal Names {#iv24} @@ -716,11 +1024,18 @@ However, several royal names seem to follow a local tradition of naming an indiv [^104]: This name occurs in the inscribed lintel II T 302 d2, found in 2017: see Rilly \& Francigny, “Closer to the Ancestors,"" 70. [^105]: Nobiin *íccí,* Andaandi *ecce-l.* -This naming tradition, in spite of the increasing influence of Islam, still exists in some parts of Sudan. In her study of the personal names among the Midob, a Nubian-speaking population of Northern Darfur, Abeer Bashir gives several examples of personal names whose meaning is connected with physical or social particularities, or with events that happened at the time these individuals were born (Bashir 2015: 136-137): +This naming tradition, in spite of the increasing influence of Islam, still exists in some parts of Sudan. In her study of the personal names among the Midob, a Nubian-speaking population of Northern Darfur, Abeer Bashir gives several examples of personal names whose meaning is connected with physical or social particularities, or with events that happened at the time these individuals were born:[^ex66] -(66) +[^ex66]: Bashir, “Address and Reference Terms in Midob," pp. 136–137. -Interestingly, two royal names belonging to this category of “contextual” names include a first element *are* which is obviously the same as the 2nd person pronoun identified above. They are the names of Queen Amanirenas (*Amnirense*) and king Amanakhareqerema (*Amnxreqerem*).[^106] The god names *Mni* “Amun” and *Amnxe* “Amanakh” were added to their original names when they received the royal crown of Kush.[^107] Their former names were *Arense* and *Areqerem* respectively. The vowel /a/ is never written in internal position (here after *Amni-* or *Amanx-*). However, it must have been present in the pronunciation because, as addressed above in [§5.2.1](#iv21) when analysing the compound *pwritrese* “the life from you”, /r/ can never be initial in Meroitic and its related languages. +{{< gloss "(66)" >}} +{r} **Midob** +{r} *Óndìtè* ← *óndì* “camel” + *tè* “own” = “rich, lit. owner of a large herd of camels” +{r} *Úccí* ← *údí* “black” + suffix *-(i)cc* = “person of black skin” +{r} *Ábágàlò* ← *ábá* “grandmother” + *gálò* “lost” = “who has lost his/her grandmother” +{{< /gloss >}} + +Interestingly, two royal names belonging to this category of “contextual” names include a first element *are* which is obviously the same as the 2nd person pronoun identified above. They are the names of Queen Amanirenas (*Amnirense*) and king Amanakhareqerema (*Amnxreqerem*).[^106] The god names *Mni* “Amun” and *Amnxe* “Amanakh” were added to their original names when they received the royal crown of Kush.[^107] Their former names were *Arense* and *Areqerem* respectively. The vowel /a/ is never written in internal position (here after *Amni-* or *Amanx-*). However, it must have been present in the pronunciation because, as addressed above in [5.2.1](#iv21) when analysing the compound *pwritrese* “the life from you”, /r/ can never be initial in Meroitic and its related languages. [^106]: Queen Amanirenas reigned around the end of the first c. BCE and the beginning of the first c. CE, Amanakhareqerema at the end of the first c. CE. For their reigns, see Rilly, “Histoire du Soudan, des origines à la chute du sultanat Fung,” pp. 242-252, 286-291 and Kuckertz, "Amanakhareqerema." [^107]: Amanakh, written *Amnx(e)* or *Mnx(e),* was obviously a hypostasis of Amun, but his identity remains a mystery. The name is not dubious; it appears in the names of king Amanakhabale and of many princes and queens. However, it is never independently attested and no Egyptian parallel is known so far. @@ -735,13 +1050,32 @@ The first element, *are* “you (sg.)” is followed by the sequences *-nase* (w We have previously seen that there were in Meroitic two types of person markers encoding the subject of the verb. First, independent pronouns such as *qo* “he, she” or *are* “you (sg.),” attested so far only in non-verbal clauses, and second, prefixed elements which are appended to the verbal compound, such as *ye-* “I” and *w-* “he/she(?)," in verbal clauses. For the 2nd person singular, a morpheme *d-*, which has remained unexplained for twenty years, is very likely the prefixed person marker that matches the independent pronoun are “you (sg.).” -In the 2000 issue of the *Meroitic Newsletter,* I published an article to show that a small corpus of Meroitic inscriptions on papyrus, leather strips, and ostraca, which were hitherto regarded as private letters, were actually protection spells.[^110] They were purchased by pilgrims from the temples, especially the temple of Amun in Qasr Ibrim, where the major part of these texts were found by the British team of the Egypt Exploration Society. I termed them “Amuletic Oracular Decrees,” after the name of the same type of texts attested in Egypt in the early first millennium BC. Because of the rich vocabulary they include, describing all kind of misfortunes from which their owner will be protected, the translation of these inscriptions is still in an early stage. However, the scheme of the introductive parts of the texts is clear. They are divided in two groups according the prefixes of the verbal forms, *y(i)-* or *d-*. +In the 2000 issue of the *Meroitic Newsletter,* I published an article to show that a small corpus of Meroitic inscriptions on papyrus, leather strips, and ostraca, which were hitherto regarded as private letters, were actually protection spells.[^110] They were purchased by pilgrims from the temples, especially the temple of Amun in Qasr Ibrim, where the major part of these texts were found by the British team of the Egypt Exploration Society. I termed them “Amuletic Oracular Decrees,” after the name of the same type of texts attested in Egypt in the early first millennium BCE. Because of the rich vocabulary they include, describing all kind of misfortunes from which their owner will be protected, the translation of these inscriptions is still in an early stage. However, the scheme of the introductive parts of the texts is clear. They are divided in two groups according the prefixes of the verbal forms, *y(i)-* or *d-*. [^110]: Rilly, “Deux exemples de décrets amulétiques oraculaires en méroïtique" and *La langue du Royaume de Méroé,* pp. 216-226. -(67) +{{< gloss "(67)" >}} +{r} **Meroitic** +{r} **Prefix** ***y(i)-*** (REM 0345, 1096, 1152(?), 1317/1168 (?), 1319, 1321, 1325, 1326) +{r} *Formula A* +{g} name*-i*,[pn-voc]({sc})|*wte-li*,life-[det]({sc})|*pke-li*,[n-det]({sc})|*y-irohe-se-l-o-wi*,[pm-vc-det-cop-emp]({sc})| +{r} *Formula B* +{r} God names and epithets +{r} *Formula C* +{g} *mlowi*,health|*y-ni*,[pm-vc]({sc})|*bnebeseni*,?| +{{< /gloss >}} -The decrees always begin with the mention of the beneficiary in the vocative. They can be called either by their name or by their title. The verbal compound in formula A (*yirohe-se-l-o-wi/d-irohe-se-l-o-wi*) is partly obscure, but it is not an optative or an imperative ([§5.1](#iv1). It is a periphrastic form – probably with an aspectual or modal value – since it includes the determiner *-l* used as nominalizer, followed by the copula. Accordingly, an explicit personal marker is expected, more precisely a 2nd person singular, because of the verbal compound. Many texts are so damaged that it is impossible to know whether the initial vocative phrase included a name or a title, but each time it is preserved, the formulae with initial *d-* occur after the titles and those with initial *y(i)-* after the proper names. This initial *d-* is very likely the expected 2nd person subject prefix, a short version of the independent pronoun *are/\*ade* “you (sg.)” or the singular of *de-b* “you (pl.),” without the plural suffix *-b.* +{{< gloss "(68)" >}} +{r} **Prefix** ***d-*** (REM 0361, 1174(?), 1236, 1322, 1323, 1324) +{r} *Formula A* +{g} noun*-l*,[n-det]({sc})|*wte-li*,life-[det]({sc})|*pke-li*,[n-det]({sc})|*d-irohe-se-l-o-wi*,[pm-vc-det-cop-emp]({sc})| +{r} *Formula B* +{r} God names and epithets +{r} *Formula C* +{g} *mlowi*,health|*d-n-se-l-o*,[pm-vc-det-cop]({sc})|*bnebeseni*,?| +{{< /gloss >}} + +The decrees always begin with the mention of the beneficiary in the vocative. They can be called either by their name or by their title. The verbal compound in formula A (*yirohe-se-l-o-wi/d-irohe-se-l-o-wi*) is partly obscure, but it is not an optative or an imperative ([5.1](#iv1). It is a periphrastic form – probably with an aspectual or modal value – since it includes the determiner *-l* used as nominalizer, followed by the copula. Accordingly, an explicit personal marker is expected, more precisely a 2nd person singular, because of the verbal compound. Many texts are so damaged that it is impossible to know whether the initial vocative phrase included a name or a title, but each time it is preserved, the formulae with initial *d-* occur after the titles and those with initial *y(i)-* after the proper names. This initial *d-* is very likely the expected 2nd person subject prefix, a short version of the independent pronoun *are/\*ade* “you (sg.)” or the singular of *de-b* “you (pl.),” without the plural suffix *-b.* The verb used in formula A is *arohe,* which, in these oracular decrees, probably means “take under someone’s protection”.[^111] It can also signify “take control,” hence “take prisoner” in military contexts (see (20)). From the two nouns groups present in formula A, only *wte-li* "life(time)" is known. A very tentative translation of formula A with prefix *d-* would be “Oh you, the XXX, you shall (?) be protected for your lifetime and your ???.” The other prefix *y(i)-* remains an enigma. It is not certain that it can be also regarded as a personal marker. Since *yi-* is a late spelling for initial /i/, it may be present in the form of the sign *i* in the verbal compound *d-i-(a)rohe-se-l-o-wi.* In that case, *yiroheselowi* would be a variant of *d-irohe-se-l-o-wi* unmarked for person. @@ -780,9 +1114,9 @@ In conclusion, a general table of the personal markers that have been identified * app: applicative voice * cop: copula * cont: continuous (tense) -* d: determiner * dat: dative * dec: declarative +* det: determiner * disc: discursive (direct discourse marker) * du: dual * emp: so-called “emphatic particle” after the copula in Meroitic (*-wi*) @@ -791,7 +1125,7 @@ In conclusion, a general table of the personal markers that have been identified * fin: final element * frq: frequentative * fut: future tense -* g: genitive (genitival postposition) +* gen: genitive (genitival postposition) * imp : imperative * impp: imperative particle (*-se*) * ipa: international phonetic alphabet @@ -806,6 +1140,7 @@ In conclusion, a general table of the personal markers that have been identified * prt1: preterite 1 * pm: personal marker * pn: person name +* purp: purposive * REM: *Répertoire d’épigraphie méroïtique* (Leclant et al., 2000). * s: subject * sg: singular